The old Bath Bus Station, on
Manvers Street, opened in 1958 under the control of the
Bristol Omnibus Company. The
Southgate area of the city, between Manvers Street to the east and St James' Parade to the west, was the area worst affected by the
Baedeker Blitz of April 1942. The bus station was built as part of a project to replace this area of the city, where the city's main railway station, connecting Bath with
Bristol and
London was already situated. The bus station was located next to the city's red brick
Victorian dairy, which showed lasting evidence of shell damage from the bombings. In this process, many of the city's older buildings and streets were destroyed to make way for not just the bus station, but also the Southgate Shopping Centre and accompanying Ham Gardens car park. The demolition of this maze of historical buildings was known as the Rape of Bath and was finally halted in the early 1960s due to public outcry. The city has since been designated a
World Heritage Site and 95% of the buildings in the centre are protected by
listed building status. The new development was seen as being a threat to the city's World Heritage Status. The bus station operated a range of services during its 49-year history – including local city buses, country buses,
National Express coach services and
open-top bus tours. It has seen the
Labour nationalisation and the
Conservative privatisation of public transport, and the morphing of Bristol Omnibus into
Badgerline, which was acquired by
FirstGroup and rebranded as
First Somerset & Avon. ==New bus station==