Perth Central Area Transit - Joondalup CAT

Joondalup CAT

The Joondalup CAT started operation on 9 January 2006, and was operated by Path Transit, then Veolia Transdev from 1 May 2011. It runs as bus routes 10 (anti-clockwise) and 11 (clockwise) around the Joondalup CBD. The routes 12 and 13 (which are on trial basis from 25 August 2008 until 27 June 2009) was the CAT services to Joondalup Arena via Joondalup Business Park. Route 13 was run until 9am on the same route as 12, bypassing Joondalup Business Park. The route 13 has been reintroduced as the ECU route from 26 July 2010 to 18 November 2010, for trial in ECU semesters, on Monday to Thursday only. From 19 February 2012, the bus routes are being unified with the Red, Blue and Yellow colour CAT bus routes to unify the CAT system in Perth and Fremantle. The stops are as follows:

Route 10 Route 11
  1. Joondalup Station Stand 81113T
  2. Edith Cowan University
  3. ECU Student Guild
  4. ECU Student Village
  5. ECU Child Care
  6. Lakeside Drive
  7. WA Police Academy
  8. West Coast TAFE Joondalup Campus
  9. Joondalup City Library
  10. Joondalup City Council
  11. Centrelink Joondalup
  12. Joondalup Health Campus
  13. Boas Avenue
  14. Joondalup Central Park
  15. Joondalup Station Stand 81113T
  1. Joondalup Station Stand 81013T
  2. Joondalup Central Park
  3. Boas Avenue
  4. Joondalup Health Campus
  5. Centrelink Joondalup
  6. Joondalup City Council
  7. Joondalup City Library
  8. West Coast TAFE Joondalup Campus
  9. WA Police Academy
  10. Lakeside Drive
  11. ECU Child Care
  12. ECU Student Village13
  13. ECU Student Guild13
  14. Grand Boulevard Car Park13
  15. Joondalup Station Stand 81013T
Route 13
  1. Joondalup Station Stand 81011T
  2. ECU Library
  3. ECU Sports and Fitness Centre
  4. ECU Student Village11
  5. ECU Student Guild11
  6. Grand Boulevard Car Park11
  7. Joondalup Station Stand 81011T

Read more about this topic:  Perth Central Area Transit

Famous quotes containing the word cat:

    As I walked on the glacis I heard the sound of a bagpipe from the soldiers’ dwellings in the rock, and was further soothed and affected by the sight of a soldier’s cat walking up a cleated plank in a high loophole designed for mus-catry, as serene as Wisdom herself, and with a gracefully waving motion of her tail, as if her ways were ways of pleasantness and all her paths were peace.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)