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List of bus stations in Singapore

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of bus interchanges or terminals that are part of Singapore's bus system (not including bus stops). Bus terminals and interchanges serve as important nodes in the transport system as bus services start and end at these stations. Over time, there are several bus stations that have been shut down due to geographical retention or the introduction of new town centres, or creation of consolidated transportation hubs. The list of former bus stations are found here.

Overview

[edit]
Interior of Boon Lay Bus Interchange
Interior of Bedok Bus Interchange

In the 1970s with the formation of Singapore Bus Service (SBS), the terminals of private companies were inherited by SBS. Many of these terminals were makeshift constructions without adequate facilities. The SBS embarked on a terminal improvement programme to build facilities such more parking space, timekeeper's booths, rest areas for bus crew members, proper platforms with adequate shelter, toilets and food facilities.[1][2] It also planned to construct new depots and terminals, so as to eliminate parking of buses in residential areas. Makeshift and roadside terminals were to be phased out.[3][4]

The development of bus terminals was closely linked to town planning in Singapore. Densely inhabited new towns were built along major roads and a bus terminal was allocated at a suitable point inside each of them. Feeder services were used to carry passengers within the new towns to the bus terminal. With the opening of the MRT system in 1987, bus terminals were sited close to subway stations so as to integrate the subway and bus services.[5] The 1980s also saw the building of larger bus interchanges in new towns, such as the one at Ang Mo Kio which was twice the size of the existing terminal it replaced.[6]

List of bus interchanges

[edit]
Interior of a naturally-ventilated Compassvale Bus Interchange

There are currently 30 bus interchanges in Singapore, serviced by four bus operators.

To improve seamless connectivity with the rail network, selected interchanges in housing estates are slowly being rebuilt as Integrated Transport Hubs. More have been planned for future housing estates, such as Woodleigh, Buangkok & Punggol Coast.

Only bus interchanges that are currently in operation are listed. A list of former bus interchanges can be found here.

Bus interchange Bus Packages Planning Area No. of
routes
Number of berths First opened Latest reopening Integrated
Transport
Hub?
Operator Connections
Ang Mo Kio Seletar Ang Mo Kio 16 9 (total)
6 (boarding)
3 (alighting)
10 April 1983 28 April 2007 Y SBS Transit  NS16  CR11 
Ang Mo Kio
Bedok Bedok Bedok 27 15 (total)
10 (boarding)
5 (alighting)
25 February 1979[7] 30 November 2014[8] Y SBS Transit  EW5 
Bedok
Bishan Bishan-Toa Payoh (anchor)
Serangoon-Eunos (tenant)
Bishan 10 6 (total)
4 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
30 April 1989[9] SBS Transit  NS17  CC15 
Bishan
Boon Lay Jurong West (anchor)
Clementi (tenant)
Jurong West 27 21 (total)
11 (end-on)
6 (boarding)
4 (alighting)
1 July 1990 27 December 2009 Y SMRT Buses  EW27  JS8 
Boon Lay
Buangkok Sengkang-Hougang (anchor)
Woodlands (tenant)
Buangkok 3 7 (end-on) 1 December 2024 Y SBS Transit  NE15 
Buangkok
Bukit Batok Bulim (anchor)
Choa Chu Kang-Bukit Panjang (tenant)
Bukit Batok 13 23 (total)
18 (end-on)
3 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
27 September 1987[10] Tower Transit  NS2 
Bukit Batok
Bukit Merah Bukit Merah Bukit Merah 14 9 (total)
6 (boarding)
3 (alighting)
28 September 1980[11] SBS Transit
Bukit Panjang Choa Chu Kang-Bukit Panjang Bukit Panjang 10 5 (total)
3 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
26 December 1999 4 September 2017[12] Y SMRT Buses  DT1  BP6 
Bukit Panjang
Choa Chu Kang Choa Chu Kang-Bukit Panjang Choa Chu Kang 15 9 (total)
5 (boarding)
4 (alighting)
8 April 1990 16 December 2018[13] SMRT Buses  NS4  JS1  BP1 
Choa Chu Kang
Clementi Clementi (anchor)
Bulim (tenant)
Clementi 14 8 (total)
5 (boarding)
3 (alighting)
16 November 1980 26 November 2011[14] Y SBS Transit  EW23 
Clementi
Eunos Serangoon-Eunos Geylang 9 6 (total)
4 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
10 December 1989[15] SBS Transit  EW7 
Eunos
HarbourFront Bukit Merah Bukit Merah 10 12 (end-on) 13 January 1985 SBS Transit  NE1  CC29 
HarbourFront
Hougang Central Sengkang-Hougang Hougang 19 10 (total)
6 (boarding)
4 (alighting)
17 December 1994 SBS Transit  NE14  CR8 
Hougang
Joo Koon Jurong West Pioneer 8 5 (total)
3 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
21 November 2015 Y SMRT Buses  EW29 
Joo Koon
Jurong East Bulim (anchor)
Bukit Merah (tenant)
Clementi (tenant)
Jurong East 17 11 (total)
7 (boarding)
4 (alighting)
30 June 1985 6 December 2020 Tower Transit  NS1  EW24  JE5 
Jurong East
Jurong Town Hall Bulim (anchor)
Bukit Merah (tenant)
Jurong East 6 8 (total)
5 (boarding)
3 (alighting)
26 November 2023 Tower Transit  NS1  EW24  JE5 
Jurong East
Pasir Ris Loyang Pasir Ris 16 13 (total)
8 (end-on)
3 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
10 December 1989[16] Go-Ahead  EW1  CR5  CP1 
Pasir Ris
Punggol Temporary Loyang (anchor)
Sengkang-Hougang (tenant)
Punggol 18 7 (total)
5 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
30 November 2003 Go-Ahead  NE17  CP4  PTC 
Punggol
Sembawang Sembawang-Yishun Sembawang 7 5 (total)
3 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
20 November 2005 Tower Transit  NS11 
Sembawang
Sengkang Sengkang-Hougang Sengkang 10 7 (total)
4 (boarding)
3 (alighting)
28 April 2001 18 January 2003 Y SBS Transit  NE16  STC 
Sengkang
Serangoon Serangoon-Eunos Serangoon 9 5 (total)
3 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
13 March 1988[17] 3 September 2011 Y SBS Transit  NE12  CC13 
Serangoon
Tampines Tampines Tampines 23 17 (total)
3 (end-on)
8 (boarding)
6 (alighting)
29 November 1987[18] SBS Transit  EW2  DT32 
Tampines
Tampines Concourse Tampines Tampines 1 3 (total)
2 (boarding)
1 (alighting)
18 December 2016[19] SBS Transit  EW2  DT32 
Tampines
Tampines North Tampines Tampines 3 5 (total)
4 (boarding)
1 (alighting)
27 November 2022 SBS Transit
Tengah Bulim Tengah 3 9 (total)
6 (boarding)
3 (alighting)
21 July 2024 Tower Transit
Toa Payoh Bishan-Toa Payoh (anchor)
Serangoon-Eunos (tenant)
Toa Payoh 21 21 (total)
14 (end-on)
4 (boarding)
3 (alighting)
26 December 1983[20] 19 May 2002[21] Y SBS Transit  NS19 
Toa Payoh
Woodlands Woodlands (anchor)
Sembawang-Yishun (tenant)
Woodlands 23 18 (total)
14 (boarding)
4 (alighting)
4 February 1996 13 June 2021[22] Y SMRT Buses  NS9  TE2 
Woodlands
Woodlands Temporary Woodlands (anchor)
Sembawang-Yishun (tenant)
Woodlands 4 5 (total)
3 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
12 March 2016[23] SMRT Buses  NS9  TE2 
Woodlands
Yio Chu Kang Seletar (anchor)
Sembawang-Yishun (tenant)
Ang Mo Kio 8 6 (total)
4 (boarding)
2 (alighting)
13 December 1987 SBS Transit  NS15 
Yio Chu Kang
Yishun Sembawang-Yishun (anchor)
Seletar (tenant)
Yishun 24 12 (total)
8 (boarding)
4 (alighting)
23 August 1987[24] 8 September 2019[25] Y Tower Transit  NS13 
Yishun

Expansion to existing interchanges

[edit]

Compassvale Bus Interchange

[edit]

Compassvale Bus Interchange was a bus interchange located along Compassvale Road in Sengkang, Singapore. First announced by the Land Transport Authority in November 2014 as an expansion for the adjacent Sengkang Bus Interchange,[26] the interchange commenced operations on 12 March 2017 and was closed on 1 December 2024 with the opening of Buangkok Bus Interchange.[27] It was an interim bus interchange for Sengkang, hosting bus services 110 and 374, as well as rail bridging services for the Sengkang LRT Line.[28]

Tampines Concourse Bus Interchange

[edit]

Tampines Concourse Bus Interchange is a bus interchange located along Tampines Concourse in Tampines. First announced by the Land Transport Authority in November 2014, as an expansion of the Tampines Bus Interchange,[29] it commenced operations on 18 December 2016.[19]

List of bus terminals

[edit]

Bus terminals are distinct from bus interchanges in Singapore. While bus interchanges are often air-conditioned and integrated with other connecting MRT lines, with some also part of Integrated Transport Hubs, bus terminals are a lot more bare-bones with only a small number of bus berths available. Additionally, not all bus terminals allow for boarding or alighting at the terminal.

Only bus terminals that are currently in operation are listed. A list of former bus terminals can be found here.

Bus Terminals Bus Packages Planning area Routes Berths Opening Operator Connections Remarks
Beach Station Bus Terminal Nil Southern Islands 4
1 (SBS Transit)
3 (Sentosa Development Corp)
13 (end-on) First Opened:
15 January 2007
Served by public buses:
30 July 2017
Sentosa Development Corp Sentosa Express
Buona Vista Bus Terminal Clementi (anchor)
Bukit Merah (tenant)
Queenstown 8
7 (SBS Transit)
1 (SMRT Buses)
(none) Old:
1970s
Reconfigured:
2012
SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation) No boarding or alighting allowed
Changi Airport PTB2 Bus Terminal Loyang Changi 7

3 (SBS Transit)

1 (Tower Transit)

2 (Go-Ahead)

1 (SMRT Buses)

5 (boarding/alighting) 1 June 1991 SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)  CG2  Changi Airport
Changi Business Park Bus Terminal Tampines (anchor)
Loyang (tenant)
Changi 2

1 (SBS Transit)

1 (Go-Ahead)

12 (end-on) 20 December 2015 SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)
Changi Village Bus Terminal Serangoon-Eunos (anchor)
Loyang (tenant)
Changi 4

3 (SBS Transit)

1 (Go-Ahead)

1 (boarding/alighting) 1975 SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)
Gali Batu Bus Terminal Choa Chu Kang-Bukit Panjang Woodlands 2 (SMRT Buses) 2 (boarding)

1 (alighting)

23 January 2021 SMRT Buses (SMRT Corporation) No boarding or alighting allowed
Ghim Moh Bus Terminal Clementi Queenstown 3 (SBS Transit) 1 (boarding/alighting) Old:

late 1970s

Relocated:

1986

SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)
Kampong Bahru Bus Terminal Bukit Merah Bukit Merah 9

5 (SBS Transit)

1 (SMRT Buses)

3 (Go-Ahead)

4 (boarding)

2 (alighting)

10 March 2018 SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)
Kent Ridge Bus Terminal Clementi Queenstown 10

6 (SBS Transit)

4 (NUS Internal Shuttle)

1 (boarding/alighting) 16 August 1981 SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)
Lorong 1 Geylang Bus Terminal Sembawang-Yishun (anchor)
Serangoon-Eunos (tenant)
Kallang 8

4 (SBS Transit)

2 (SMRT Buses)

2 (Tower Transit)

1 (boarding)

1 (alighting)

Old:

May 1971

Existing:

2013

Tower Transit Singapore Pte Ltd (Transit Systems)  EW10  Kallang
Marina Centre Bus Terminal Bukit Merah Downtown 8

2 (SBS Transit)

3 (Tower Transit)

2 (SMRT Buses)

(none) Old:

30 November 1986

Extension Built:

June 2015

Existing:

24 February 2021

SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation) No boarding or alighting allowed
Queen Street Bus Terminal Bukit Merah Rochor 1 (SBS Transit) 1 (boarding)

1 (alighting)

Old:

1940s-1950s

Existing:

13 October 1985

SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation),

Other Singapore Bus Operators

Resorts World Sentosa Bus Terminal Nil Southern Islands

1 (SBS Transit)

Other Singapore Bus Services

1 (boarding/alighting) 21 November 2015 Sentosa Development Corp Sentosa Express
Saint Michael’s Bus Terminal Bishan-Toa Payoh Whampoa 6 (SBS Transit) 13 (end-on) Old:

1980s

Renovated:

2011

Existing:

2013-2014

SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)
Shenton Way Bus Terminal Bukit Merah Marina Bay 9

7 (SBS Transit)

1 (SMRT Buses)

1 (Tower Transit)

1 (boarding) Old:

1970s

First Relocation:

28 June 1987

Second Relocation:

26 April 2010

Existing:

25 June 2017

SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)  EW15  Tanjong Pagar No alighting allowed
Sims Place Bus Terminal Serangoon-Eunos Aljunied 3 (SBS Transit) 1 (boarding/alighting) 13 December 1976 SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)
Tuas Bus Terminal Jurong West Tuas 4 (SBS Transit) 1 (boarding)

1 (alighting)

Old:

2 January 1998

Existing:

7 October 2017

SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)
Upper East Coast Terminal Bedok Bedok 8

6 (SBS Transit)

1 (Go-Ahead Singapore)

1 (Tower Transit)

2 (boarding)

2 (alighting)

9 December 2001 SBS Transit Ltd (ComfortDelGro Corporation)

Buona Vista Bus Terminal

[edit]

Buona Vista Bus Terminal (location:1°18′33″N 103°47′11″E / 1.30917°N 103.78639°E / 1.30917; 103.78639) is a bus terminal located at Holland Drive in the Buona Vista area of Singapore. The terminal is located adjacent to Buona Vista Community Centre, and close to the Buona Vista MRT station.[30] Unlike most other terminals, it does not allow passenger boarding or alighting on the site itself.[31]

Previously, the Buona Vista area was served by the Commonwealth Avenue Terminal, located at the intersection of Commonwealth Avenue and North Buona Vista Road.[32] Due to the construction of the Commonwealth Avenue extension in the 1970s, a portion of the terminal was affected, resulting in the creation of a temporary terminal at Holland Drive.[33] The temporary Holland Drive terminal (located next to the City Shuttle Service terminus), started operating in November 1975 for certain bus routes.[34] In 1982, SBS had to vacate the Commonwealth Avenue terminal and move to a temporary terminal called North Buona Vista Terminal.[35] By the late 1980s, the present Buona Vista terminal had become operational, and bus services to the nearby Ayer Rajah Industrial Estate were introduced.

Changi Airport Passenger Terminal Building Bus Terminal

[edit]

The Changi Airport Passenger Terminal Building (PTB) Bus Terminals (location: 1°21′20″N 103°59′20″E / 1.35556°N 103.98889°E / 1.35556; 103.98889) are bus termini located at the basement of each of Singapore Changi Airport's terminals (1, 2 and 3). The termini at Terminals 2 and 3 are connected to the Changi Airport MRT station.

Unlike typical terminals in Singapore, bus services do not stop for extended periods, due to the lack of bus parking facilities. Buses looping at Changi Airport first stop at PTB3 terminal, before proceeding to PTB1 and PTB2.

Due to heightened security concerns, buses can only enter the basements after auxiliary police officers have physically boarded and inspected them. Bus services that serve this terminal have only single-deck and articulated (bendy) buses in their fleets, due to height restrictions, even though these services are high-demand.

Only some bus services stop at Terminal 4 and a dedicated bus stand has been built. Bus 24, 34, 36 and 110 were amended here. [36]

Some berths are reserved at the terminal for Singapore Police Force and Changi International Airport Services vehicles.

Changi Village Bus Terminal

[edit]

Changi Village Bus Terminal was opened in 1975 to take over operations from the former smaller road side Changi Point Bus Terminal.[citation needed] It was built over the site of the former Changi Cinema. The bus terminal comprises a small boarding and alighting berth area for bus services that is directly adjacent to the hawker centre. The bus terminal continues to be operated by SBS Transit despite its close location to the areas where Go-Ahead Group bus services operate.

Ghim Moh Bus Terminal

[edit]

Ghim Moh Bus Terminal is a bus terminal located in Ghim Moh along Ghim Moh Road with a small bus park behind the terminal. The terminal is now one of the few surviving terminals of the 1970s era in which it was common for terminals to be built along the roadside with only a small booth for bus captains to report to when completing their duties. The terminal allows boarding and alighting at a bus stop along the road and serves the residents of Buona Vista and Ghim Moh as well as those in the Mount Sinai housing estate.

Before the consolidation of bus routes to operate to and from major interchanges, roadside terminals were very common, especially in the seventies. Ghim Moh Bus Terminal was no exception, and opened in the late 1970s to complement the building of Ghim Moh Estate. The terminal was situated adjacent to Block 9 and 10. In 1986, the bus terminal was relocated to a bus bay outside Block 9 along Ghim Moh Road when the existing bus terminal was converted into a car park. One of the car park entrances was sealed off and functions as a turnabout point for buses entering from Commonwealth Avenue West. An alighting bay was also near the turnabout point, opposite a refuse collection point.

In 2006, the HDB announced SERS redevelopment scheme for Blocks 9, 9A, 10, 11, 12 and 12A.[37] The blocks were slated to be demolished and then redeveloped. In early 2012, the blocks of flats were vacated and were demolished in 2013.[38]

Jurong Island Bus Terminal

[edit]

Jurong Island Bus Terminal (location: 1°16′0″N 103°42′16″E / 1.26667°N 103.70444°E / 1.26667; 103.70444) is a bus terminal on the southwest of Jurong Island, Singapore, serving the only form of public transport on the offshore island off the southwest coast of the main island.

The terminal was located near Oasis@Sakra, the amenity centre on the island. Initially, JTC provided shuttle bus services to and from Jurong East MRT station.[39] Later SBS started public bus services to Jurong Island. In 2002, two Jurong Island services were notable for being the first routes to use CNG powered buses in Singapore.[40] However, SBS later stopped operating these services.[41] Since then transportation to the island has been provided by private companies.

Kent Ridge Bus Terminal

[edit]

Kent Ridge Bus Terminal is a bus station located at Kent Ridge, in western Singapore. This bus terminal sits at a corner of the National University of Singapore (NUS) Kent Ridge campus, at the corner of Eusoff Hall and mainly serves as a transfer point for NUS students to other parts of Singapore. The terminal primarily serves as a terminating point for bus routes serving the NUS campus and residential developments around Pasir Panjang and West Coast. Apart from regular public bus services, NUS Internal Shuttle Bus routes also call at the terminal.[42]

Opened on 16 August 1981, the terminal has a single vehicular concourse area, with separate entrance and exit leading to Clementi Road. The terminal has a sheltered bus stop that functions as both a boarding and alighting point, and a bus park in the middle of the terminal for the layover of buses. A terminal building contains an office and a driver’s lounge. As a layover point for several NUS ISB routes, an electronic driver’s log-in kiosk for ComfortDelGro Bus (the NUS shuttle bus operator) is also located at the terminal.

Lorong 1 Geylang Bus Terminal

[edit]

Lorong 1 Geylang Bus Terminal (location: 1°18′43″N 103°52′19″E / 1.31194°N 103.87194°E / 1.31194; 103.87194) is a bus terminal located in Kallang. It sits between Geylang Road and Sims Avenue, opposite Kallang MRT station and beside the Kallang River.[43]

The terminal was originally a fringe car park. In 1975, it was planned as a Park and Ride terminal. Under the Park and Ride scheme, drivers could park their cars and then ride the City Shuttle Service to the Central Business District. The services ran daily (except Sunday) during peak hours for 50 cents a ride. However, the Park and Ride Scheme did not prove to be very popular. Due to low ridership, the terminal was converted to a public bus terminal in 1988 and handed over to SBS Transit and Trans-Island Bus Services. In 1998, Crawford Street Bus Terminal was shut down and its bus services were relocated to this terminal.[44]

In November 2015, it was reported that the terminal housed some of the last DAF buses which were still in use by SMRT Buses, which is now being replaced by newer buses.[45]

Marina Centre Bus Terminal

[edit]

Marina Centre Bus Terminal (location: 1°17′29″N 103°51′30″E / 1.29139°N 103.85833°E / 1.29139; 103.85833) is a bus terminal located along Raffles Boulevard in Marina Centre, Singapore. It was opened on 30 November 1986. It is near Promenade MRT station and directly under Benjamin Sheares Bridge. The bus terminal does not allow boarding or alighting. The final alighting stop for bus services bound for Marina Centre Bus Terminal is the bus stop outside Pan Pacific Hotel. The first boarding stop for buses leaving the terminal is the bus stop after the Singapore Flyer.

In June 2015, the Marina Centre Bus Terminal Expansion opened together with a public coach park. There are 13 lots for SBS Transit and Tower Transit buses and 4 marked as 'Reserved.' As of June 2015, there are bus parking lots at the roadside of the terminal occupied by SMRT buses.

Queen Street Bus Terminal

[edit]

Queen Street Bus Terminal (location: 1°18′13″N 103°51′23″E / 1.30361°N 103.85639°E / 1.30361; 103.85639), also known as Ban San Bus Terminal, is a bus terminal in Singapore. Queen Street Bus Terminal serves as the terminal for cross-border bus and taxi services to Johor Bahru, Malaysia.[citation needed] It opened on 13 October 1985.[46]

Saint Michael's Bus Terminal

[edit]
Saint Michael's Bus Terminal

Saint Michael's Bus Terminal, (location:1°19′34″N 103°51′19″E / 1.32611°N 103.85528°E / 1.32611; 103.85528 ) abbreviated to St. Michael's Ter, is a bus terminal located in the subzone of Balestier in Novena, Singapore. Despite its name, the terminal is not located near St. Michael's Road (because St Michael Road and the estate used to be connected to this place prior to the CTE's construction), but is bordered by Whampoa Road, Kim Keat Road, Whampoa Park Connector and the Sungei Whampoa, within the Whampoa estate.

Opened on 26 May 1985,[47] the terminal has a single combined entrance and exit located along Whampoa Road. All berths are end-on, and are used for both loading/unloading passengers and parking of buses.

History

[edit]

In the 1970s, Saint Michael's Bus Terminal used to house 2 bus services from Singapore Shuttle Bus (Pte) Ltd, which have since been withdrawn in 2003, upon SBS Transit taking over the terminal.[48]

In 2011, the terminal was renovated and refurbished to provide full wheelchair accessibility for wheelchair-bound passengers. This included the installation of wheelchair ramps for every bus berth. In 2014, addition and alteration works were carried out under LTA Contract VT353,[49] which was awarded to TQC Builders Pte. Ltd. in April 2013. The contract included to installation and construction of a new annexe at the terminal, with public restrooms, a driver's lounge and ancillary rooms, built on the space once occupied by the excess bus parking spaces; new rain shades, seating and wall mounted fans were also installed, with a new coat of paint applied to the structure.[50]

Sims Place Bus Terminal

[edit]

Sims Place Bus Terminal (location: 1°18′58″N 103°52′46″E / 1.315973°N 103.879341°E / 1.315973; 103.879341) is a roadside bus terminal located in Geylang, Singapore. The bus terminal is situated near a market and several flats. The nearest MRT station is Aljunied. The terminal is one of the few surviving terminals of the 1970s, in which it was common for terminals to be built along the roadside with only a small booth for bus captains to report to when completing their duties.

Upper East Coast Bus Terminal

[edit]

Upper East Coast Terminal (location: 1°19′4″N 103°57′9″E / 1.31778°N 103.95250°E / 1.31778; 103.95250) is a bus terminal located along Upper East Coast Road, in the Bedok planning area, Singapore. The terminal was opened in 2001 after the closure of the Marine Parade Bus Terminal. In April 2017, Services 25 & 55 were extended here from Bedok and Siglap Road respectively after the terminal expansion was completed in 2017, along with the expansion of Hougang and Punggol Bus interchanges, in order to accommodate new services under the Bus Service Enhancement Programme (BSEP).[51]

Changi Business Park Bus Terminal

[edit]

Changi Business Park Bus Terminal is a bus terminal located along Changi South Avenue 1, near the SUTD campus and intersection with Changi Business Park Central 2. The terminal serves as a terminating point for bus routes serving the Changi Business Park area, and does not offer any rail connections. It opened on 20 December 2015, serving as the terminal for services 47 and 118.

There are 12 end-on lots for alighting/boarding served by 2 berths, with 2 more unused currently.

List of depots and bus parks

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "SBS plan to give better facilities at terminals". The Straits Times. 30 September 1978. p. 16. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  2. ^ "SBS to improve bus terminals". Business Times. 9 August 1979. p. 12. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  3. ^ S. M. Muthu (4 November 1977). "SBS will invest $50 m to house expanding fleet". The Straits Times. p. 13. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  4. ^ "All roadside bus terminals will eventually be abolished". The Straits Times. 1 December 1979. p. 21. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  5. ^ Sugawara, Misao (March 1995). "Urban Transportation in Asian Countries" (PDF). Japan Railway & Transport Review. 4. East Japan Railway Culture Foundation: 26. ISSN 1342-7512. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  6. ^ "SBS shelters while you wait". New Nation. 9 December 1980. p. 3. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  7. ^ "New bus interchange". The Business Times. 26 February 1979. Retrieved 7 September 2017 – via NewspaperSG.
  8. ^ "New bus interchange". The Business Times. 26 February 1979. Retrieved 7 September 2017 – via NewspaperSG.
  9. ^ "Bishan's new bus interchange to operate from today". The Straits Times. Singapore. 30 April 1989.
  10. ^ "Recreation facilities for Bukit Batok 'on the way'". The Straits Times. 25 September 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  11. ^ "Two feeder services part of new bus plan". The Straits Times. 27 September 1980. Retrieved 8 September 2017 – via NewspaperSG.
  12. ^ Abdullah, Zhaki (4 September 2017). "New Bukit Panjang transport hub opens after two-year delay". The Straits Times. ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
  13. ^ "New Choa Chu Kang Bus Interchange to Open on 16 December 2018" (Press release). Land Transport Authority. 19 November 2018.
  14. ^ "New Clementi Bus Interchange Opens on 26 November 2011". LTA. 17 November 2011. Archived from the original on 9 July 2012.
  15. ^ "Pasir Ris and Eunos interchanges to open on Sunday". The Straits Times. 7 December 1989. Retrieved 27 September 2017 – via NewspaperSG.
  16. ^ "Pasir Ris and Eunos interchanges to open on Sunday". The Straits Times. 7 December 1989. Retrieved 27 September 2017 – via NewspaperSG.
  17. ^ "Interchange in new town opens on Sunday". The Straits Times. 8 March 1988. Retrieved 23 June 2017 – via NewspaperSG.
  18. ^ "Exhibition to acquaint residents with new bus interchange". The Straits Times. 15 November 1987.
  19. ^ a b "Tampines to get new bus interchange with elderly- and disabled-friendly features". The Straits Times. Singapore. 28 November 2016. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
  20. ^ "Quiet start at Toa Payoh interchange". The Straits Times. 27 December 1983. Retrieved 27 September 2017 – via NewspaperSG.
  21. ^ "Speech By Mr Yeo Cheow Tong At The Opening Of The First Airconditioned Bus Interchange At Toa Payoh Sunday on 19 May 2002". www.mot.gov.sg. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
  22. ^ Fang Yiyang (13 June 2021). "Largest integrated transport hub in Singapore opens in Woodlands". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 13 June 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  23. ^ "Woodlands Regional Bus Interchange to be Upgraded Temporary Relocation from 12 March 2016". Land Transport Authority (Singapore). 4 February 2016. Archived from the original on 17 May 2021. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
  24. ^ "Tibs bus interchange to open at Yishun". The Straits Times. 22 August 1987. Archived from the original on 16 September 2017. Retrieved 16 September 2017 – via NewspaperSG.
  25. ^ "Yishun Integrated Transport Hub to Open on 8 September 2019". Land Transport Authority. 7 September 2019.
  26. ^ "Sengkang and Tampines bus interchanges to be expanded". todayonline.com. TODAY. 25 November 2014. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  27. ^ "LTA | New Buangkok Bus Interchange to Start Operations on 1 December 2024". www.lta.gov.sg. Retrieved 4 November 2024.
  28. ^ "New bus interchange in Compassvale from March 12". todayonline.com. TODAY. 23 February 2017. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  29. ^ "Sengkang and Tampines bus interchanges to be expanded". TODAY. Singapore. 25 November 2014. Retrieved 16 April 2023.
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