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Citybus (Hong Kong)

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Citybus
An Alexander Dennis Enviro500 MMC in the new livery on route 796X in February 2024
ParentBravo Transport
Founded5 August 1979; 45 years ago (1979-08-05)
HeadquartersChai Wan
Service typeBus services
Routes108 (2015)
DepotsChai Wan[1]
Siu Ho Wan
Cheung Sha Wan
Wong Chuk Hang
Tuen Mun
Tung Chung
Fleet981 (2015)
Daily ridership647,500 (2014 average)[2]
Annual ridership236,349,000 (2014)[3]
Chief executiveAdam Leishman
ChairmanCliff Zhang Kun
Websitewww.citybus.com.hk

Citybus Limited (Chinese: 城巴有限公司) is a bus company which provides both franchised and non-franchised service in Hong Kong. The franchised route network serves Hong Kong Island, cross-harbour routes (between Hong Kong Island and Kowloon/New Territories), North Lantau (Tung Chung and Hong Kong Disneyland), Hong Kong International Airport, Kowloon, New Territories, Shenzhen Bay Port and Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge Hong Kong Port. The non-franchised routes serve mainly City One Sha Tin. It also provides bus rental services and staff bus services for some large companies, such as TVB and China Light and Power.

From 1984 to 2001, the company offered a cross-border service between Hong Kong and mainland China using mainly double-decker Leyland Olympians, but this was discontinued due to stiff competition. However, in 2007, Citybus began operating route B3, which goes to Shenzhen Bay Port.

Since August 2020, the company has been wholly owned by Bravo Transport, which also owned the then-third largest operator, New World First Bus (NWFB). Prior to this, both NWFB and Citybus were owned by NWS Holdings and its predecessors. On 1 July 2023, the NWFB operations merged into Citybus.

History

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Citybus was founded on 5 August 1979, by former China Motor Bus traffic manager Lyndon Rees with one Volvo B55 double-deck bus, providing a shuttle service for the Hong Kong United Dockyard in Hung Hom. In 1981, it commenced operating a residential bus route between City One Shatin and Kowloon Tong MTR station, which provided an innovative "breakfast bus" service.[4] In 1982, the United Transport Group purchased a 49% shareholding.[5][6]

In 1984, Citybus began a cross-boundary coach service between Hong Kong and Shenzhen with ex National Travel West and West Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive Eastern Coach Works bodied Leyland Olympians. In 1985, the company introduced five air-conditioned Olympian coaches. Since then it has continued to expand its fleet of air-conditioned buses.[6]

In the late 1980s, Citybus was purchased by Tsui Tsin-tong's CNT Group. It commenced operating residential bus services with 100 new Olympians linking housing estates to MTR stations.[6]

In December 1990, Citybus launched Capital Citybus in London with an all-yellow livery for the routes in North and East London and a red and yellow livery for central London.[7][8] This was sold to FirstGroup in July 1998 and renamed First Capital.[9][10][11]

In 1991, the Hong Kong Government awarded Citybus its first franchised route, 12A (Admiralty Tamar Street to Macdonnell Road) on Hong Kong Island, which was originally operated by China Motor Bus and then withdrawn in the 1980s.[6]

In September 1993, Citybus took over 26 franchised routes from China Motor Bus after winning a competitive tender. These were branded as Network 26. To operate these, a fleet of 101 Leyland Atlanteans was purchased from Singapore Bus Service. A further 14 franchised routes were awarded to the company in 1995 without tendering, with the fleet now expanded to more than 500 buses. During these years Citybus expanded its penetration of the Hong Kong Island market pushing nearly all China Motor Bus routes into low profitability.[4][6]

In 1996, with the Tsing Ma Bridge coming into operation and the commencement of settlement in the Tung Chung new town, Citybus won another tender to operate 13 new franchised routes serving Tung Chung and the new Hong Kong International Airport. In 1998, the airport Cityflyer service commenced, which is part of Citybus and is solely used for Airport express routes to the city. The Cityflyer service consisted of a series of four routes: A11, A12, A21 and A22, with A10 being added in 2006. Citybus also operates various Overnight Airport routes and Airport Shuttle Routes.[4]

In 1998, following the expiration of the franchise of China Motor Bus, a further 12 routes were transferred to Citybus. Citybus's fleet was up to 1,100 buses.[4] The remaining routes of China Motor Bus were transferred to a new operator, New World First Bus.

Its business was expanded into mainland China with a joint venture operation in Beijing through Citybus (China) Limited. It was not only Beijing's first joint venture bus operation, but it also marked the introduction of air-conditioned buses for the first time in the capital city. Following the success of this route, a second urban express coach route was introduced in Beijing. However, the services in Beijing were terminated shortly after the disposal of shares of Citybus (China) Limited from Citybus to Kingsman Global Limited, another Hong Kong company, in June 2004. Citybus had also once operated a route (route 658) in Tianjin. The service is now operated by another company after Citybus disposed all its interest in Citybus (China) Limited.

In July 1999, Citybus was purchased by Stagecoach Group of Scotland.[4][12] In 2001, the cross-boundary coach service between China and Hong Kong was discontinued.

In June 2003, Stagecoach Group sold Citybus to Chow Tai Fook Enterprises, the parent company of the major rival operator New World First Bus.[13][14] After a series of restructurings, Citybus became a subsidiary of NWS Holdings, which was also the parent company of New World First Bus and New World First Ferry.[4]

In August 2020, along with New World First Bus, Citybus was sold to the Bravo Transport consortium, made up of private equity firm Templewater Bravo, Hong Kong-listed investment holding company Hans Energy and British bus operator Ascendal Group.[15][16][17][18] The founder of Ascendal Group, Adam Leishman, also became the CEO of Bravo Transport.[19]

In July 2022, Bravo Transport announced that it would be discontinuing the New World First Bus brand, and the NWFB operations merged into Citybus on 1 July 2023, when the bus franchises were renewed.[20]

Services

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As of 2015 Citybus operates 108 routes.[3]

It currently operates two franchises:

Franchise Name Start date of current franchise Expiry date of current franchise Notes
Franchise 1 Hong Kong Island and Cross Harbour 1 June 2016 30 June 2023[21] The franchise was originally due to expire on 31 May 2026, but was amended to 30 June 2023 to align with the expiry of the New World First Bus franchise.[22]
1 July 2023 30 June 2033 A new 10-year Urban and New Territories franchise commencing on 1 July 2023 has been granted to Citybus and will replace both expiring Citybus and NWFB franchises.[20]
Franchise 2 Airport and North Lantau 1 May 2013 30 April 2023[23]
1 May 2023 30 April 2033 The franchise has been renewed for another 10 years starting from 1 May 2023.[20][21]

Numbering System

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Citybus also uses its own numbering system according to the service area of bus routes

Hong Kong Island

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Kowloon / New Territories

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The number assignment on Kowloon Peninsula roughly follows that used by the Kowloon Motor Bus with a few modifications

Lantau Island/Airport

[edit]

Letter Assignments

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  • Prefixes
  • Suffixes:
    • A-F: May represent independent routes (e.g. 2, 2A) or branches of a main route (e.g. 72 and 72A)
    • H: Hospital routes (e.g. 8H)
    • M: Feeder routes to railway lines operated by the MTR Corporation
    • P: Peak hour routes
    • R: Routes operated during public holidays and/or public events with the exception of 5R, which provides full day service
    • S: Special routes, including some overnight routes, routes operated due to big events or peak hour routes
    • X: Express bus routes

Cityflyer

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Cityflyer is a subsidiary of Citybus that primarily operates airport coach services. The service was started during the opening of the Hong Kong International Airport in 1998. This service is operated exclusively using 110 Alexander Dennis Enviro500 MMCs and 3 Alexander Dennis Enviro500s as of 30 May 2019. Citybus is currently in ownership of more Cityflyer-designated vehicles but said vehicles have yet to enter service. The vehicles contain exclusive features that cannot be found on the rest of the fleet, including luggage racks equipped with Closed-circuit television, blinds, USB charging ports and more comfortable padded seats with wider legroom

Fleet

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As of 2020, the fleet consisted of 1013 buses, of which 950 are Double-decker buses and the remaining 63 are single-decker. Most are from British or European manufacturers, such as Alexander Dennis and Volvo Buses, but most single-deckers have been ordered from mainland Chinese manufacturers including Youngman and BYD Auto.[24]

Number Lists
Old Numbering
1-100 Open-top buses, previously non-airconditioned buses too
101-238 Leyland Olympian
239-248 Volvo Olympian
249-269 Volvo B10TL
300-314 Leyland Olympian
315-316 Volvo Olympian
324-329 Volvo Olympian
330-395 Leyland Olympian
396-699 Volvo Olympian
A600-A699 Leyland Atlantean
701-740 Dennis Dragon
801-880 Dennis Dragon
881-894 Dennis Trident 3
901-999 Volvo Olympian
1001-1190 Dennis Trident 3
1201-1221 Dennis Trident 3
1266-1277 Volvo B10M
1301-1357 Volvo B6LE
1401-1430 Dennis Trident 3
1401-1436 Dennis Dart
1481-1490 Dennis Dart
1501-1580 MAN NL262
1584-1586 Yixing SDL6105/SDL6120
1601-1661 Dennis Trident 3
1801-1803 Norinco Neoplan BN316
1812-1815 Youngman JNP6105GR
2001-2005 Volvo B12
2001-2042 Dennis Dart SLF
2051-2052 BYD K9R
2053-2054 Yixing SDL6105/SDL6120
2061-2094 Dennis Dart SLF
2100-2161 Dennis Trident 3
2200-2316 Dennis Trident 3
2500 MAN 24.350
2501-2505 Alexander Dennis Enviro200 MMC
2600-2607 Youngman JNP6120GR
2700 Dennis Trident 3
2800 Scania K94UB
3001-3062 Dennis Trident 3
3301-3360 Dennis Trident 3
3601 Dennis Trident 3
3800-3859 Alexander Dennis Enviro400 10 metre
4000-4039 Alexander Dennis Enviro500 11 metre
4040-4051 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK1 11 metre
4052-4091 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK2 11 metre
4500-4529 Volvo B9TL 11 metre
5001-5103 Volvo B10TL
5200-5224 Volvo B9TL 12 metre
5230-5236 Volvo B8L 12 metre
5500-5582 Alexander Dennis Enviro500 12 metre
5583-5599 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK1 12 metre
5600 Alexander Dennis Enviro500H 12 metre
5601-5669 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK1 12 metre
5670-5719 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK2 12 metre
5720-5749 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK1 12 metre
5750-5839 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK2 12 metre
5840-5851 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK1 12 metre
6001-6030 Neoplan Centroliner
6090 MAN A95 12.8 metre
6100-6209 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK2 12.8 metre
6300 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK1 12.8 metre
6301-6499 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK2 12.8 metre
6500 Volvo B9TL 12.8 metre
6501-6588 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK2 12.8 metre
6700-6701 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK2 12.8 metre
6800-6871 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC MK2 12.8 metre
7000-7059 Alexander Dennis Enviro400 10 metre
7500 Volvo B9TL 10 metre
8000-8065 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC 12 metre
8100-8319 Alexander Dennis Enviro500 12 metre
8320-8399 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC 12 metre
8400-8401 Alexander Dennis Enviro500H 12 metre
8402-8567 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC 12 metre
8800-8845 Volvo B8L 12 metre
8900 Scania K280UD 12 metre
8910 Electric double decker bus
9000-9042 Volvo Olympian
9100-9157 Alexander Dennis Enviro500MMC 11 metre
9500-9559 Volvo B9TL 11 metre
New Numbering
1xxxx Single-decker buses
3xxxx 10 metre double decker buses
4xxxx 11 metre double decker buses
5xxxx 12 metre double decker buses
590xx Scania K310UD
591xx Electric bus
599xx Open-top buses
6xxxx 12.8 metre double decker buses

Depots

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Operations are divided into two main departments, each of which have depots across the areas that they cover.

Operation Department One

Operation Department Two

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References

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  1. ^ "城巴/新巴 - 新創建集團成員 - 企業社會責任".
  2. ^ "Average Daily Public Transport Passenger Journeys by Public Transport Operator" (PDF). Monthly Traffic and Transport Digest 2015. Transport Department. 2015.
  3. ^ a b "2015 Annual Transport Digest". Transport Department. 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Citybus". Archived from the original on 29 December 2022.
  5. ^ Hong Kong to buy British Commercial Motor 28 September 1985
  6. ^ a b c d e "Hong Kong Buses Part 2: Citybus Limited" Fleetline issue 248 May 1997 page 91
  7. ^ From Hong Kong by bus Commercial Motor 10 January 1991
  8. ^ The History of Ensignbus Ensignbus
  9. ^ FirstGroup finds London bus firm is just the ticket The Herald 9 July 1998
  10. ^ Tendered Bus Services Select Committee on Environment, Transport & Regional Affairs March 1999
  11. ^ Annual Report Year Ended 31 March 1999 [dead link] FirstGroup
  12. ^ Stagecoach enters Hong Kong BBC News 18 January 1999
  13. ^ Stagecoach sells HK buses BBC News 9 June 2003
  14. ^ Stagecoach takes the £176m road away from Hong Kong The Daily Telegraph 10 June 2003
  15. ^ Private equity fund Templewater buys Citybus and New World First Bus in HK$3.2b deal The Standard 21 August 2020
  16. ^ Hong Kong sale saves jobs Buses issue 787 October 2020 page 20
  17. ^ "International consortium acquires First Bus and Citybus" (PDF). Ascendal Group. NWS Holdings & Templeman. 21 August 2020. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  18. ^ "Disposal of the entire issued shared capital of NWS Transport Services Limited" (PDF). NWS Holdings. August 2020. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  19. ^ "Parent company of Citybus and New World First Bus mulls merging option". Marketing Interactive. 30 July 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  20. ^ a b c "Bravo Transport Announces the Merger of Citybus and NWFB Franchises into the Newly Created Citybus (Franchise for Urban and New Territories Network)" (PDF). Bravo Transport. 12 July 2022. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 March 2023. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  21. ^ a b "3 new bus franchises granted". news.gov.hk. 12 July 2022. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  22. ^ "History". Bravo Transport. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  23. ^ Grant of new franchises to three bus companies Hong Kong Government 24 April 2012
  24. ^ "Public Transport - Citybus Limited | Annual Transport Digest 2020". www.td.gov.hk. Retrieved 1 September 2021.
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