Английская Википедия:478 Dunoon–Portavadie

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox bus line

Файл:Passing place on the B836 - geograph.org.uk - 3122142.jpg
A passing place near Glen Lean on the narrow B836, which forms a large part of the 478's route

The 478 is a bus route in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, which runs between Dunoon and Portavadie via Tighnabruiach and Kames.[1][2][3] It is operated by West Coast Motors, which was established in 1921. Strathclyde Partnership for Transport inaugurated the route, along with that of the 477 and 479, in October 1993.[4]

Given the distance covered by the route (Шаблон:Convert), it only runs eight times a day, Monday to Saturday (four in the morning and four in the afternoon). The first bus departs Dunoon Pier at 5:48 am (terminating at Tighnabruiach's Royal an Lochan hotel; the second run is the first to terminate at Portavadie ferry terminal); the last one at 5:30 pm. The journey takes between an hour and an hour and a half.[5][6] On weekdays, additional stops in Dunoon, Hunters Quay, Ardnadam and Sandbank occur in the mid-afternoon to support the release of children from local schools.[4]

The route is noted for its long stretches of single-track roads with scattered passing places,[7] especially along the B836 between Sandbank and Auchenbreck, at the junction with the A886 Colintraive–to–Strachur road.[4]

The drivers of the 477, 478 and 479 have dubbed their routes the "Bermuda Triangle" due to their complexity and remoteness.[4]

Route

From Dunoon Pier, the route takes the passenger north through Sandbank on the A885, then west through Clachaig, Ardtaraig and (after rounding the northern shores of Loch Striven) Auchenbreck via the B836 (part of National Cycle Route 75). It then turns south on the A886 en route to the MV Loch Dunvegan for the short ferry crossing between Colintraive and Rhubodach on the Isle of Bute. The bus retraces its route to the north and continues past the junction with the B836, before looping around Loch Ruel to Tighnabruiach, Millhouse[8] and Portavadie.[5]

References