Jump to content

Brighton & Hove Regency Route

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Regency Route
Wright Eclipse Gemini 2 bodied Volvo B9TL on route 29A in November 2023
Overview
OperatorBrighton & Hove
Former operator(s)
Routes
Regular
28
BrightonLewesRingmerHailshamPolegateEastbourne
29
BrightonLewesUckfieldCrowboroughTunbridge Wells
29A
BrightonLewesIsfieldUckfieldHeathfield
Limited
29B
BrightonLewesRingmerUckfieldCrowboroughTunbridge Wells (1 bus per day each way)
29X
Tunbridge WellsCrowboroughUckfieldLewesBrighton (1 southbound bus per day)
Route map

Spa Valley Railway Tunbridge Wells railway station Tunbridge Wells
Kent
East Sussex
Spa Valley Railway Eridge railway station Eridge
Boarshead
Crowborough
Poundgate
Heathfield
Heron's Ghyll
Cross-in-Hand
Five Ash Down
Blackboys
Framfield
Uckfield railway station Uckfield
Little Horsted
Halland
Lavender Line Isfield
Raystede
Ringmer
Lewes railway station Lewes
Laughton
Falmer
Golden Cross
East Sussex
Brighton & Hove
Lower Dicker
Falmer railway station Sussex University
Lower Horsebridge
Moulsecoomb railway station Moulsecoomb
Hailsham
Brighton University (M)
Polegate Polegate railway station
Elm Grove
Willingdon
Brighton railway station Brighton
Eastbourne Eastbourne railway station
← {{{previous_line}}}  {{{system_nav}}}  {{{next_line}}} →

The Regency Route is a name given since 1977 to a regular bus service between Brighton in East Sussex and Tunbridge Wells in Kent, both towns with a Regency heritage.[1] The route runs via the East Sussex towns of Lewes, Uckfield and Crowborough.

The Brighton to Tunbridge Wells route is one of few successful examples of bustitution, as it replaced through trains from Brighton via Lewes and Uckfield to Tunbridge Wells withdrawn in the 1960s when the railway lines from Lewes to Uckfield and Eridge to Tunbridge Wells were closed by British Railways.[2] The bus route now provides access to the Lavender Line and the Spa Valley Railway preserved railways which run on lengths of those two railways. The journey from end to end is timed at between 1¾ and 2 hours.

Originally operated jointly by Southdown Brighton & Hove (now Brighton & Hove), Southdown East Sussex (now Stagecoach in East Sussex), and Maidstone & District Motor Services (now Arriva Southern Counties), the service is now operated solely by Brighton & Hove. Since April 2011, Brighton & Hove has used the Regency Route branding for the route 28 service from Brighton to Lewes and Ringmer as well as the 29.

History

[edit]
  • 1977: The route number 729 and Regency Route name were introduced by Southdown Motor Services operating between Brighton and Tunbridge Wells, a joint operation with Maidstone & District Motor Services. Service 28 was a shortened variant of the 128/728 route to Eastbourne, running as far as Ringmer.
  • 1 January 1986: Formation of Brighton & Hove Bus and Coach Company from the Brighton operations of Southdown Motor Services. The route remained a joint operation with Southdown (from its Lewes depot) and Maidstone & District.
  • 1998 - Maidstone & District Motor Services was acquired by Arriva to form Arriva Kent & East Sussex
  • 26 September 2004 - 729 renumbered to 29.
  • 25 September 2005 - Stagecoach and Arriva withdraw from joint service, route entirely Brighton & Hove.
  • 9 April 2009 - A night bus service running three days a week, the N29, was introduced over the route between Brighton and Uckfield.[3]
  • 17 April 2011 - 28 and 29 both branded as Regency Routes; combined 10-minute frequency between Brighton and Lewes.
  • 2019 - Some of the buses used were painted in a purple and gold livery and given purple upholstery.
  • 2022 - Some of the purple buses were decorated for the Queen's Platinum Jubilee and later some were given icons of Brighton (i360 tower), Lewes (castle) or Tunbridge Wells (Spa Valley Railway locomotive).
  • 23 July 2023 - 28 extended beyond Ringmer to/from Hailsham, Polegate and Eastbourne; new Route 29A between Brighton, Uckfield and Heathfield; services via Halland reduced to just one bus per weekday each way and renumbered 29B.[4]
  • 22 September 2024 - evening and Sunday services on Route 28 now also extended to/from Polegate and Eastbourne (previously these started/terminated in Hailsham).[5]

Current services

[edit]

The Regency Route currently consists of the following services:[6]

  • Route 28 links Brighton with Eastbourne, running via Falmer, Lewes, Ringmer, Hailsham and Polegate. On weekdays and Saturdays the service frequency is every 30 minutes each way running the full route between Brighton and Eastbourne, plus there is an additional one bus per hour running only between Brighton and Lewes. On Sundays, services run hourly on the full route.
  • Routes 29/29B/29X operate between Brighton and Tunbridge Wells via Falmer, Lewes, Uckfield, Crowborough and Eridge (with buses on route 29B additionally serving Ringmer and Halland). Route 29 operates every 30 minutes on weekdays and Saturdays and hourly on Sundays. Routes 29B and 29X both have a very limited service on weekdays only, with the former operating one bus per day in each direction and the latter operating a single early-morning journey towards Brighton.
  • Route 29A operates between Brighton and Heathfield via Falmer, Lewes, Isfield, Uckfield and Blackboys. Buses operate hourly on all days of the week.

These services combine to give an off-peak service of a bus every 10 minutes in each direction between Brighton and Lewes on weekdays and Saturdays, and a bus every 20 minutes in each direction on Sundays.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Kaye, David (2006). Old Buses. ISBN 978-0-7478-0650-9. Retrieved 18 August 2011.
  2. ^ Luke, Dylan; Steer, Jim; White, Peter. "3.0 – Case studies: single route Interurban Bus services". Interurban Bus: Time to raise the profile (PDF) (Report). Greengauge21. p. 23. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  3. ^ Lewes, Uckfield, Newhaven and Seaford to get Brighton night buses Worthing Herald
  4. ^ "Regency Route Extension". Brighton & Hove Buses. 23 July 2023. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
  5. ^ "September Service Updates". Brighton & Hove Buses. 22 September 2024. Retrieved 1 September 2024.
  6. ^ "Regency Route Map" (PDF). Brighton & Hove. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
[edit]