Calgary Transit Bus Routes
The following Calgary Transit bus routes serves Centre Street (as of February 2012, communities served are in parentheses):
- Route 2 Killarney 17th Ave./Mount Pleasant (Beddington Heights, Crescent Heights)
- Route 3 Elbow Drive/Sandstone (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
- Route 4 Huntington (Huntington Hills)
- Route 5 North Haven (Huntington Hills)
- Route 17 Spruce Cliff/Renfrew (Crescent Heights)
- Route 20 Heritage/Northmount (Huntington Hills)
- Route 32 Sunridge/Huntington (Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
- Route 46 Beddington Heights (Beddington Heights, Huntington Hills)
- Route 62 Hidden Valley Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills)
- Route 64 MacEwan Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills)
- Route 88 Harvest Hills (Beddington Heights, Huntington Hills)
- Route 109 Harvest Hills Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
- Route 114 Panorama Hills (Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
- Route 116 Coventry Hills Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
- Route 142 Panorama Hills Express (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
- Route 146 Beddington Heights (Beddington Heights, Huntington Hills)
- Route 300 BRT Airport/City Centre (Thorncliffe, Highland Park, Tuxedo Park, Crescent Heights)
- Route 301 BRT North/Sirocco (Crescent Heights, Tuxedo Park, Highland Park, Thorncliffe, Huntington Hills, Beddington Heights)
Read more about this topic: Centre Street (Calgary)
Famous quotes containing the words transit, bus and/or routes:
“Theres that popular misconception of man as something between a brute and an angel. Actually man is in transit between brute and God.”
—Norman Mailer (b. 1923)
“An actor rides in a bus or railroad train; he sees a movement and applies it to a new role. A woman in agony of spirit might turn her head just so; a man in deep humiliation probably would wring his hands in such a way. From straws like these, drawn from completely different sources, the fabric of a character may be built. The whole garment in which the actor hides himself is made of small externals of observation fitted to his conception of a role.”
—Eleanor Robson Belmont (18781979)
“The myth of independence from the mother is abandoned in mid- life as women learn new routes around the motherboth the mother without and the mother within. A mid-life daughter may reengage with a mother or put new controls on care and set limits to love. But whatever she does, her childs history is never finished.”
—Terri Apter (20th century)