London Buses route 22 is a Transport for London contracted bus route in London, England. Running between Putney Common and Oxford Circus, it is operated by Go-Ahead London.
22 | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Operator | Go-Ahead London |
Garage | Putney |
Vehicle | Volvo B5LH MCV EvoSeti Volvo B5LH Wright Eclipse Gemini 2 |
Peak vehicle requirement | 17 |
Night-time | Night Bus N22 |
Route | |
Start | Putney Common |
Via | King's Road Sloane Square Hyde Park Corner Green Park station Berkeley Square |
End | Oxford Circus |
Length | 6 miles (9.7 km) |
Service | |
Level | Daily |
Frequency | About every 7 minutes |
Journey time | 31-58 minutes |
Operates | 06:00 until 01:00 |
History
editRoute 22 commenced operation on 17 May 1909 between Clapton (Lea Bridge station) and Elephant & Castle via Clapton, Hackney, Dalston, Shoreditch, London Bridge and Borough. On 26 July 1909, it was extended to Leyton with a Sunday extension to Epping Forest via Whipps Cross and Woodford replacing route 9.[1]
On 28 October 1909, route 22 was changed again to work between Tulse Hill and Leyton via Effra Road, Brixton Road, Kennington Park Road, Elephant & Castle and Whipps Cross. On 3 January 1910, it was cut back again to work Clapton (Lea Bridge station) to Tulse Hill.[1]
From 6 April 1911, route 22 was withdrawn between Bank and Elephant & Castle, being replaced by new route 35 over that section. At the same time it was extended to Putney station via Cheapside, Holborn, Piccadilly, King's Road and Putney Bridge. The daily extension to Homerton (Clapton Park Tavern) commenced soon after on 12 June 1911, but the route was withdrawn throughout on Sundays on 8 October 1911 for just over three years until 8 November 1914, when it became daily once again.[1]
The connection with route 35 became clear once again as from 6 August 1916, when route 22 was diverted daily at Putney Bridge to run to Putney Common, but withdrawn on Sundays between Lower Clapton and Homerton being extended to Chingford via Leyton and Walthamstow, replacing route 35A on that day. This change was very short lived and route 22 reverted to being a daily Putney Common to Homerton route on 2 October 1916.[1]
On 1 December 1924, short-workings between Tottenham Court Road and Putney were numbered 22A, short-workings between Tottenham Court Road and Homerton were numbered 22B and short-workings between Piccadilly Circus and Homerton were numbered 22C. The plain 22 route number being used for journeys for the whole length of the route from Putney Common to Homerton. By 30 June 1925, these had been reduced to 22 Putney Common to Homerton and 22A Piccadilly Circus - Homerton. This situation remained until 3 October 1934, when the newly constituted London Passenger Transport Board instituted its own numbering system, which generally re-instated the situation previous to December 1924, in this case, leaving just the plain 22 to work Putney Common to Homerton.[1]
On 9 August 1939, RT1 buses were used to run the route from Homerton to Putney.[2]
By the 1990s, the three short workings had become 3 distinct routes, with route 22 from Putney Common to Piccadilly Circus, route 22A running from London Bridge to Clapton Park and route 22B from Homerton Hospital to Piccadilly Circus. Owing to the confusion, the 22A and 22B routes were withdrawn in 1998, and replaced by a new route 242 and an extension of route 149.[citation needed]
Upon being re-tendered, London General commenced a new seven-year contract from 22 July 2000.[3] On 22 July 2005, crewed operation finished with the AEC Routemasters replaced by Wright Eclipse Gemini bodied Volvo B7TLs.[3][4]
On 20 October 2012, Go-Ahead London commenced a new contract after successfully re-tendering to retain the route.[5] On 15 July 2017, the route was withdrawn between Green Park station and Piccadilly Circus and diverted to Oxford Circus via Berkeley Square to replace route C2.[6] On 21 October 2017, London General commenced a further contract.[7] It is operated out of Putney garage with a peak vehicle requirement of 17.[8][9]
In 2021, the service frequency during peak times was reduced from 8 buses per hour to 6.[10]
Current route
editRoute 22 operates via these primary locations:[11]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e Warren, Kenneth (1986). The Motorbus in Central London. Shepperton: Ian Allan Publishing. pp. 80/81. ISBN 0-7110-1568-6.
- ^ Reed, John (2000). London Buses: A Brief History. Capital Transport Publishing. p. 44. ISBN 9781854142337.
- ^ a b Stewart, David (2006). London's Last Routemasters. Harrow Weald: Capital Transport. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-85414-295-5.
- ^ Blacker, Ken (2007). Routemaster: 1970–2005. Vol. 2 (2nd ed.). Harrow Weald, Middlesex: Capital Transport. p. 173. ISBN 978-1-85414-303-7.
- ^ "Route 22 - award announced 21 December 2011". Transport for London. 21 December 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
- ^ Bus service changes 16 June to 28 July 2017 Transport for London 30 June 2017
- ^ Tender news Go-Ahead London 28 March 2017
- ^ "Tender News" Bus Talk issue 46 June 2017 page 10
- ^ Routes Go-Ahead London
- ^ Mortimer, Josiah (21 December 2021). "The 41 London bus routes that have quietly been cut in 2021". MyLondon. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
- ^ Route 22 Map Transport for London
External links
edit- Media related to London Buses route 22 at Wikimedia Commons
- Timetable