Reading Transport Limited,[1] trading as Reading Buses, is an English municipal bus operator owned by Reading Borough Council,[2] serving the towns of Reading, Bracknell, Newbury, Slough, Windsor, Maidenhead, Wokingham and the surrounding areas in the counties of Berkshire, Oxfordshire, Surrey and Hampshire, as well as parts of Greater London.

Reading Buses
Alexander Dennis Enviro400 City in Lion livery in Bracknell bus station, February 2024
ParentReading Borough Council
Founded31 October 1901; 123 years ago (1901-10-31)
HeadquartersReading
Service areaBerkshire
Greater London
Surrey
Oxfordshire
Hampshire
Service typeBus services
Routes55
DestinationsReading
Bracknell
Newbury
Wokingham
Slough
Windsor
Maidenhead
Fleet260 (October 2024)
Fuel typeDiesel
Natural Gas
Electric
Chief executiveRobert Williams
Websitewww.reading-buses.co.uk

History

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Horse tram era

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Horse tram on Oxford Road in 1893

The origins of Reading Transport can be traced back to the 19th century, when the privately owned Reading Tramways Company (part of the Imperial Tramways Company) was formed. The company was authorised to construct and operate a horse tram route on an east–west alignment from Oxford Road through Broad Street in the town centre to Cemetery Junction. This route formed the core of what became known as the main line of the tram and trolleybus network.[3]

Construction started in January 1879, with the entire line open by May. A fleet of six single-decked cars were initially used, with 31 horses, providing a 20-minute frequency. The cars operated from a depot on the south side of the Oxford Road, immediately to the east of Reading West railway station. By the 1890s the whole fleet had been replaced by double-decked cars operating at a 10-minute frequency. The company made several proposals to add routes and electrify the system, but none of these were implemented, and in 1899 the borough corporation decided to purchase the system.[3]

The purchase deal was completed on 31 October 1901, and Reading Corporation Tramways came into being. The corporation set out about first extending, and then electrifying the system. The extensions were completed by December 1902, and the last horse cars ran in July of the following year.[3]

Electric tram era

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Reading Corporation Tramways opening ceremony on 22 July 1903

The new electric trams started operating in July 1903. Extensions were constructed to the Wokingham Road and London Road (both from Cemetery Junction), and new routes added to Whitley, Caversham Road, Erleigh Road and Bath Road. The trams operated from a new depot in Mill Lane, a site that was to remain Reading Transport's main depot until it was demolished to make way for The Oracle shopping mall in 1998.[4]

The electric tram services were originally operated by 30 four-wheeled double decked cars supplied by Dick, Kerr & Co. In 1904, six bogie cars and a water car (used for keeping down the dust on the streets) were added to the fleet, from the same manufacturer. No further trams were acquired, and a planned extension from the Caversham Road terminus across Caversham Bridge to Caversham itself was abandoned because of the outbreak of World War I. The war also led to a significant maintenance backlog.[4]

In 1919, Reading Corporation started operating its first motor buses. These ran from Caversham Heights to Tilehurst, running over the tram lines and beyond the tram termini. Because of the state of the track, the Bath Road tram route was abandoned in 1930, followed by the Erleigh Road route in 1932. Eventually it was decided that the tramways should be abandoned and replaced by trolleybuses, operating over extended routes. The last tram ran on the Caversham Road to Whitley route in July 1936, and the last car on the main line ran in May 1939.[4]

Trolleybus era

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Trolleybus in Newtown in 1965

The first trolleybus wiring erected was a training loop on Erleigh Road, which opened in early 1936. This loop was never used in public service, and was subsequently dismantled. Public service commenced on 18 July 1936,[5] on a route replacing the tram route from Caversham Road to Whitley Street. In May 1939, the remaining tram routes from Oxford Road to Wokingham Road and London Road were converted to trolleybus operation, with a short extension from Wokingham Road to the Three Tuns, and a much longer extension from the Oxford Road through the centre of Tilehurst to the Bear Inn. The extended main line, from the Three Tuns to the Bear, still exists today as bus route 17, the town's busiest and most frequent route, and the first to be designated a premier route.[5]

During World War II a trolleybus branch was constructed from the Oxford Road to Kentwood Hill, enabling trolleybuses to replace motor buses with a consequential saving in precious oil-based fuel. In 1949 the Whitley Street line was extended to Whitley Wood and Northumberland Avenue, and a short branch was built to Reading General station. Subsequent short extensions took the system to its full extent, with the Kentwood route running to Armour Hill and the Northumberland Avenue line running to the junction with Whitley Wood Road.[5]

By 1965, most UK trolleybus systems had closed, and the manufacturers of the overhead equipment gave notice that they would cease production. At the same time the trolleybuses were criticised in the local press because they cost more to operate than motor buses and were inflexible, even though the trolleybuses were profitable (Reading's motor buses made a loss), faster and less polluting. Reading Corporation decided to abandon the trolleybus system, and the routes were phased out between January 1967 and November 1968.[5]

The UK's first contra-flow bus lane was instigated along Kings Road, when that road was made one-way in the early 1960s. The trolleybuses continued to operate two-way, as it was considered uneconomic to erect wiring on the new inbound route, London Road. The concept of the contra-flow bus lane was proved successful, and adopted in other places for motor buses.

Expansion and competition

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Reading Transport offices in 1985, showing contraflow buslane in Mill Lane (now The Oracle shopping centre)
 
Reading Transport's Mill Lane depot interior in 1989

The Transport Act 1980 deregulated long distance bus services. Reading Transport took advantage of this new freedom to start a service from Reading through London to Southend. The service was numbered X1 and was run jointly with Southend Transport.[6] In 1982 the X1 was shortened to run from Reading to Aldgate in East London, under the Goldline brand, and joint operation ceased.

As a result of the legislation that accompanied the deregulation of local bus services in 1986, the operations of Reading Transport were transferred to Reading Transport Limited, an "arms length" company whose shares were held by Reading Borough Council. Bus deregulation also meant that the local council no longer had any power to regulate the routes and fares of Reading Transport, nor could they prevent other operators from starting competitive services within the borough.

In 1991 Reading Transport was rebranded Reading Buses.[7] In 1992 Reading Transport acquired the Reading and Newbury operations of BeeLine, one of the privatised successors to the state-owned Alder Valley. These acquisitions led to Reading Transport operating buses in Newbury, and in the rural areas around Reading and Newbury, for the first time. Additionally, BeeLine had operated a Reading to London service under the LondonLink name, and that was merged into the Goldline service and the resulting service renamed London Line. The Goldline name was retained for use by Reading Transport's non-scheduled service business. The London Line service ceased in 2000.

Reading Buses faced competition on Reading urban routes from 1994, when Reading Mainline, an independent company, started operations with 10 AEC Routemasters acquired from Southend Transport, later expanding to 45 Routemasters on letter-designated routes.[8] Reading Buses initially retaliated with the registration of a new limited-stop service using Optare MetroRiders under the Fast-Line brand before introducing a low-cost unit with unbranded minibuses running against Mainline routes E, F and H.[8] Labour shortages created problems for the competitor, and Reading Buses acquired Reading Mainline in May 1998. Reading Transport continued to operate the Routemasters under the Reading Mainline brand until they were finally withdrawn on 22 July 2000.[9][8]

In December 2017, Reading Buses started to serve London again when it took over Green Line Coaches route 702 from Bracknell to the Green Line Coach Station at Victoria via Windsor and Slough from First Berkshire.[10] In January 2018 Reading Buses took over two routes (2 and 5), and won Slough Borough Council tenders for evening (4) and Sunday services (6) from First Berkshire.

In September 2018, Reading Buses purchased Newbury & District from Weavaway.[11] The companies have worked together in the past, most noticeably on the Jet Black 1 service which operates between Reading and Newbury. In March 2019, Courtney Buses was purchased with 57 buses.[12][13] In November 2019, routes 2 (which had already been withdrawn as a result of too much competition from Courtney in May 2018, but added back into the company after the purchase in March 2019) and 5 in Slough and Windsor were transferred to the Courtney Buses division, with 2 other routes, which Courtney had taken over from First Berkshire (10/15) also grouped in a similar manner. However, First won the tenders for the evening service 4 and Sunday service 6 back.[14][15]

 
Reading Buses 'Open Day' 2024 event

Route branding

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Previous Logo
 
Optare Excel LowRider in 1999 in a variant of the livery used until the introduction of premier routes

Since 2004, Reading Buses and Reading Borough Council have made a significant investment in upgrading the quality of Reading's main urban bus routes. In autumn of that year, Reading Buses introduced its first branded Premier Route in the form of the number 17, running between the Three Tuns on Wokingham Road and the Bear Inn at Tilehurst via the town centre and Oxford Road, and the linear descendant of the old main line. This was intended as the first in a series of such routes, each providing a weekday daytime frequency of between 3 and 8 buses per hour. Each premier route, or group of routes, would be allocated a distinctive colour, to be used on the buses on that route, and also on maps and other publicity.[16]

Since then the premier route concept has been rolled out on most of Reading's urban routes. In April 2009, a similar concept was introduced to some of Reading Buses' longer distance rural routes. These were rebranded as Vitality Routes, using specially branded green and silver or red and silver buses.[16][17] In 2014, these too were changed to a colour brand, becoming 'Lime Routes'. Most longer distance and interurban services now have animal related branding, with the lion to Bracknell and the leopard to Wokingham. The lime brand is still retained on the service to Mortimer.

Current operations

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Reading Buses

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Reading Transport operates public service buses under the Reading Buses brand throughout the town of Reading, and along a number of corridors out to other local towns. All routes have a colour scheme, a concept first introduced in 2004 with the introduction of 'Premier Routes', where each route or group of routes allocated a distinctive colour. These colours are used on the buses used on that route, and also on maps and other publicity. Urban town area routes provide a weekday daytime frequency of between 2 and 8 buses per hour, depending on the route.[16] Five of the urban routes now operate 24 hours a day, reflecting the level of demand for local buses around the clock:

  • Emerald 5 and 6 to Whitley Wood
  • Purple 17 between Tilehurst and Wokingham Road Three Tuns (a pub/restaurant)
  • Claret 21 to Lower Earley
  • Yellow 26 to Calcot IKEA (when IKEA is shut, buses terminate at Calcot Sainsburys)
 
The "Lion" branded route in Reading

Out of town routes operate at lower frequency, with between one and four buses an hour. These operate out as far as Newbury, Henley-on-Thames, Wokingham, Bracknell and Riseley:[18]

  • JetBlack 1 to Newbury
  • Lime 2/2a to Burghfield Common, Mortimer and Tadley (AWE)
  • Leopard 3 to Arborfield and Wokingham
  • Lion 4/X4 to Wokingham and Bracknell
  • Pink 25 to Peppard Common
  • Aqua 28 to Henley-on-Thames
  • Azure 43 to Pangbourne and Upper Basildon
  • Mereoak Park and Ride 600 to Mereoak Park and Ride, Riseley and Shinfield.

Reading Buses also operate the Hospital Park and Ride service 300, which runs between the Thames Valley Park and Ride and the Mereoak Park and Ride via the Royal Berkshire Hospital and the University of Reading, and the Winnersh Triangle Park & Ride 500.

The Thames Valley P&R service 400 was indefinitely suspended in July 2022 due to low usage and a lack of funding.[19]

Newbury & District

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In September 2018, Reading Buses purchased Newbury & District from Weavaway.[11]

The operated services include:

  • 1a/1c circulars between Newbury Wharf and Thatcham Broadway.
  • 1d to Thatcham Broadway.
  • 2/2a/2c to Wash Common, Tesco Superstore and Pigeons Farm.
  • 3/3a/3c/3x to Hungerford.
  • 4/4a/4b/4c to Speen and Lambourn.
  • 6/6a to East & West Ilsley.
  • 8 to Tesco Superstore and Pigeons Farm.
  • 9/9b/9c to Newbury Racecourse, Tesco Superstore and Pigeons Farm.
  • 103/103a/b/c to the Greenham Business Park and Tesco Superstore.
  • V1 shuttle service between Newbury Rail Station and the Vodafone Campus.
  • 730/731 between Basingstoke, Frimley and Heathrow.

All services (except 3c, which continues to Thatcham Broadway) serve the Newbury Wharf Bus Station.

The 1a/c/d, 103/103a/b/c, 730/731 and V1 services are operated solely by Reading Buses. All other routes are operated on behalf of West Berkshire Council.

Thames Valley Buses

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In December 2017, it was announced that Reading Buses was to take on three services withdrawn by First Berkshire & The Thames Valley in the Slough area.[20] A fourth route was later added.[21] The Thames Valley Buses name, historically associated with Thames Valley Traction, was used for the new services.[22] Operation began on 20 January 2018.[23]

In November 2019, the Thames Valley and Courtney Buses brands began to be combined, which was a gradual process that was complete by April 2021, with Slough and Windsor being the first areas to change over to Thames Valley, adding two more routes. However, a retendering of contracts by Slough Borough Council saw the two tendered routes won back by First. Since then, Maidenhead and Wokingham routes, along with the trading name, have changed over.[14][15]

The London Line 701 and 702 (Windsor Express)

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In December 2017, Reading Buses announced they would take over the Green Line 702 route from First Berkshire & The Thames Valley. The service had a refreshed livery and was branded Green Line Express. In 2018 this was expanded to include the new route 703 between Bracknell and Heathrow.

With the delivery of new vehicles in June 2023, the combined Green Line Express brand was replaced with The London Line 702, and Flightline 703, the latter now co-branded with Heathrow Airport. [24] The two routes are marketed together in Bracknell under the name Windsor Express which is shown prominently at the front of the buses. In addition, The London Line 701 was introduced to be the brand used on the 3 buses per day from Reading to Slough/Legoland in the early morning, with them making return trips in the late evening.

Flightline 730/731

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On 21 August 2023, Newbury & District commenced operations on the new Flightline 730/731 route between Basingstoke, Frimley, Camberley and Heathrow.[25]

National Express

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Reading Buses formerly operated the 925 route between Woking and Heathrow, but this contract was suspended with the onset on the coronavirus pandemic.

Newbury & District also operated two routes, the 402 and select trips of the 507. Two coaches were maintained by N&D during the operation at their Greenham Park depot. The 402 was introduced in early 2023 to make use of otherwise dead (Out of Service) runs between London and Newbury.

The operation of theses services by N&D ended in late 2023, with the 402 being withdrawn completely, and the two coaches being returned to NatEx.

Obsolete brands

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Newbury Buses

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Newbury Buses Dennis Dart, pre "Newbury & District" competition

Until August 2011, Reading Transport operated public service buses in the town of Newbury and the surrounding rural area under the "Newbury Buses" brand. Two routes were branded using the same Vitality Route brand that was used by Reading Buses, and provide weekday daytime frequencies of two buses per hour. Another longer distance route, to Basingstoke, was jointly operated with Stagecoach in Hampshire and branded as The Link.

When Reading withdrew from all commercial and tendered work in the Newbury area, the majority of work passed to Newbury & District. The Link is now operated by Stagecoach in Hampshire on a revised timetable to reflect the Stagecoach depot being in Basingstoke.

Jet Black 1 was subcontracted to Weavaway Travel in 2011, using several Alexander Dennis Enviro400s, which were owned by Weavaway but in a route-branded version of the Reading Buses livery and on the Reading fleet system. Additional Enviro400s owned by Weavaway in an all-over black livery were also able to be used on the route.

Goldline Travel

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Goldline logo

Reading Buses used the Goldline Travel name for its non-public-service bus operations, including services operated under contract for various local employers. Goldline Travel was also responsible for the operation of Fastrack and Daytrack park and ride services and Nighttrack night bus services, all of which are operated under contract to Reading Borough Council.

Goldline Travel had a two-tone green colour scheme, although most services were operated by vehicles in colour schemes specified by the contracting organisation. Unlike services run by Reading Buses, Goldline gave change on their routes. This was mainly for the benefit of visitors who are more likely to use routes such as park-and-ride.

In May 2008, Goldline won the contract to operate route 142 from Checkendon, Woodcote and Purley to Reading; the route was previously operated by Thames Travel. However, when the route was next tendered, in May 2012, the contract reverted to Thames Travel.[26]

In February 2009, the private hire services run by Goldline ceased, and the coaches were all sold.[27]

Loddon Bridge Park & Ride

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In 2015, Loddon Bridge Park & Ride route 500 ceased and the site was closed, having been superseded by Winnersh Triangle Park & Ride, following the completion of the new site by Reading and Wokingham Borough Councils.

Kennections

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Following a contract win from West Berkshire Council, Reading Buses introduced the Kennections brand in Newbury in September 2016. These routes were previously run by Newbury & District, the bus service trading name for Weavaway Travel, who in turn took them over from Reading Buses' now-defunct Newbury Buses brand. All drivers were TUPEd to Reading Buses.

In April 2020, Kennections was merged into Newbury & District, with the latter name being retained. The app was also changed to Newbury & District in September of that year.[28]

Courtney Buses

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In March 2019, Reading Buses purchased Courtney Buses as part of their expansion across Berkshire.[12][13]

Between November 2019 and April 2021, the Courtney Buses brand began to be phased out.

Fleet

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As of October 2024, the fleet consists of 260 buses. The table below shows an overview of the types of buses in use in the current fleet of Reading Buses and its subsidiaries.

Current fleet (Oct 2024)
Quantity Chassis Body Type Year manufactured
5 Integral Optare Solo Single-decker 2013-2016
23 Integral Alexander Dennis Enviro200 Single-decker 2013-2018
40 Integral Alexander Dennis Enviro400 Double-decker 2009-2011
43 Scania K270UB Alexander Dennis Enviro300SG Single-decker 2013-2014
1 Dennis Trident Plaxton President Double-decker (open-top) 1999
24 Integral Alexander Dennis Enviro200MMC Single-decker 2019-2024
50 Integral Alexander Dennis Enviro400MMC Double-decker 2014-2016
17 Scania N280UD Alexander Dennis Enviro400 City Double-decker 2016-2017
23 Integral Alexander Dennis Enviro400 City Double-decker 2016-2024
2 Scania N94UD East Lancs OmniDekka Double-decker 2004
4 Scania ND270UD Optare OmniDekka Double-decker 2009
7 Integral Wright StreetLite DF Single-decker 2013-2014
6 Integral Wright StreetDeck Double-decker 2016
4 Integral Mercedes-Benz Sprinter EVM Cityline Single-decker 2023
1 Integral Volvo B12M Plaxton Panther Single-decker coach 2008
1 Integral Volvo B8R Caetano Levante 2 Single-decker coach 2015
1 Integral Volvo B11R Plaxton Panther 3 Single-decker coach 2019
4 Integral Volvo B8R Plaxton Panther 3 Single-decker coach 2023
2 Integral Volvo B8R Plaxton Leopard Single-decker coach 2023
2 Integral Irizar i6S Efficient Single-decker coach 2024

Fuels

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Ethanol-fueled Scania OmniCity in May 2008 in the livery it carried when used on the 17

Reading Buses has a history of experimenting with biofuels, including biodiesel and alcohol fuel. By 2008, all but one of Reading's bus fleet was fuelled by a mix of 5% biodiesel and 95% conventional diesel.[29][30][31]

In late 2007, Reading Buses placed an order with Scania for 14 ethanol-fuelled double decker buses to replace the existing fleet of biodiesel-powered vehicles operating premier route 17. At the time the order was placed, this was the largest order for ethanol-fuelled buses in the UK. These buses started work on 26 May 2008.[32][33][34]

In October 2009, it was discovered that instead of the bio-ethanol fuel having been sourced from sugar beet grown in the English county of Norfolk (as had been advertised), it was actually made from wood pulp imported from Sweden. On learning this, Reading Borough councillors launched an investigation into how they and the Reading Transport Board could have been deceived. All the ethanol-powered buses have since been converted to run on the same bio-diesel mix as the rest of the fleet.[35]

Reading Buses had 31 hybrid electric Alexander Dennis Enviro400Hs delivered in 2010 and 2011,[36][37][38] however none are now operated as hybrids. One Enviro400H was converted into an experimental battery electric bus in 2019 for use on route 26, while the remaining buses were converted to diesel power and given a full refurbishment.[39][40]

In May 2013, 20 buses powered by compressed natural gas (CNG) were introduced. These are used on the Greenwave routes,[41] Leopard 3/8/9, Tiger 7 and Bronze 11. A further 14 vehicles arrived in 2014, which work the Lime 2, Leopard 3/8/9 and Pink 22/25.[42][43] One member of this fleet, No 420, holds the land speed record for a regular service bus, having achieved 80.82 mph under test conditions in May 2015.[citation needed] It carries a special cow print livery reflecting the fact that the compressed natural gas is, at source, methane derived from cow dung.

In 2017, five CNG-fuelled Scania N280UDs with Alexander Dennis Enviro400 MMC bodywork, the world's first biogas-fuelled double-decker buses, were delivered to Reading Buses for use on the Royal Blue 33 route.[44] One of these buses is named after Richard Wilding.[45] A further 17 CNG-fuelled Scania N280UDs, these fitted with Enviro400 City bodies, arrived in 2018 for the Purple 17 service.[46]

References

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  1. ^ Companies House extract company no 02004963 Reading Transport Limited
  2. ^ "Reading bus company inspiring move to public ownership". BBC News. 30 October 2023. Retrieved 17 February 2024.
  3. ^ a b c "Reading Horse Tramways". Bus Zone. Archived from the original on 27 August 2008. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
  4. ^ a b c "Reading Corporation Tramways / Transport". Bus Zone. Archived from the original on 27 August 2008. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
  5. ^ a b c d "Reading Corporation Transport – Trolleybuses". Bus Zone. Archived from the original on 27 August 2008. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  6. ^ "The X1 Story". SCT61 and Richard Delahoy. April 2003. Archived from the original on 6 July 2008. Retrieved 14 March 2008.
  7. ^ New name Commercial Motor 2 May 1991
  8. ^ a b c "Reading Mainline". The Independent Bus. Retrieved 5 September 2024.
  9. ^ "Reading Mainline". Bus Zone. Archived from the original on 11 June 2008. Retrieved 20 May 2008.
  10. ^ "702 Green Line". Reading Buses. Archived from the original on 16 November 2017.
  11. ^ a b Newbury & District Reading Buses acquires Newbury & District operation
  12. ^ a b Reading Buses agree terms to purchase Courtney Buses Bracknell News 6 March 2019
  13. ^ a b Reading Buses buys out Courtney Buses Wokingham Paper 6 March 2019
  14. ^ a b "Thames Valley brand combines with Courtney Buses". October 2019.
  15. ^ a b "Thames Valley Buses and Courtney Buses to merge - Reading Buses". Archived from the original on 29 December 2019.
  16. ^ a b c "Reading Buses – Premier routes". Reading Transport Ltd. Archived from the original on 20 July 2008. Retrieved 9 February 2008.
  17. ^ "Bus in the Countryside 2009". The Bus Industry Awards Limited. Archived from the original on 16 September 2011. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
  18. ^ London Buses On the Go http://londonbusesonthego.blogspot.com/2017/12/introducing-reading-buses.html
  19. ^ "Thames Valley park & ride closure". Reading Buses. 13 May 2022.
  20. ^ "Reading Buses to step in and save key Slough bus routes". www.sloughexpress.co.uk.
  21. ^ "CONFIRMED: Two bus companies step up to save axed services in Slough and Windsor". Royal Borough Observer. 12 January 2018.
  22. ^ "Thames Valley brand to be resurrected". 16 January 2018.
  23. ^ "Thames Valley". www.reading-buses.co.uk.
  24. ^ Team, routeone (16 June 2023). "Green Line now Flight Line and London Line for Reading". routeone. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  25. ^ "A great new way to get to Heathrow". Reading Buses. 7 August 2023. Retrieved 4 September 2023.
  26. ^ Crossley, William (31 May 2012). "Customer feedback fuels bus shake-up". Oxford Mail. Newsquest (Oxfordshire & Wiltshire) Ltd. Retrieved 21 July 2013.
  27. ^ Bus Zone – Updates May 2008. Retrieved 29 May 2008
  28. ^ https://www.reading-buses.co.uk/get-newbury-district-app Reading Buses 18 September 2020
  29. ^ "All aboard the bio-diesel buses". Reading Evening Post. 8 March 2007. Archived from the original on 22 March 2007. Retrieved 26 November 2007.
  30. ^ Thorne, Lucy (1 May 2008). "Bus fare hike looms as fuel prices rocket". Reading Chronicle. Archived from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 20 May 2008.
  31. ^ "Public Meeting on Climate Change". Friends of the Earth. 23 October 2007. Retrieved 28 May 2008.
  32. ^ "Reading Transport places UK's largest ever order for ethanol-powered buses". Scania. Archived from the original on 6 February 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2008.
  33. ^ Mbubaegbu, Chine (22 May 2008). "New 24-hour green bus service on road". Reading Evening Post. Retrieved 28 May 2008.
  34. ^ "Reading Buses – Route 17". Reading Transport. Retrieved 25 March 2009.
  35. ^ "Red light for 'green' bio-ethanol buses". Berkshire Live. 14 October 2009. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
  36. ^ "One Third Hybrid". Reading Buses. Archived from the original on 29 March 2012. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  37. ^ "Hybrid buses to hit the streets". Reading Chronicle. 30 November 2010. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  38. ^ "Hybrid buses for route 17". getreading. 24 March 2011. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  39. ^ "Enviro400Hs lose their H". Buses. Stamford: Key Publishing. 20 April 2017. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  40. ^ "Reading Buses converts hybrid ADL to full-electric". Coach & Bus Week. Peterborough: Emap. 13 August 2019. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  41. ^ "greenwave". Reading Buses. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  42. ^ "Lime routes". Reading Buses. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  43. ^ "New gas buses". Reading Buses. Retrieved 29 May 2013.
  44. ^ "World first Enviro400CBG cooks on gas at Reading". routeone. 3 March 2017. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  45. ^ "Reading Buses Name Bus After Richard Wilding OBE". www.albumbus.co.uk. Retrieved 23 August 2018.
  46. ^ "Reading launches gas buses on flagship route 17". Coach & Bus Week. Peterborough: Emap. 16 January 2018. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
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