Operated seven bus garages. In June 2013
Alperton,
Greenford,
Hayes,
Uxbridge and
Willesden Junction were sold to Metroline and Atlas Road and
Westbourne Park to Tower Transit. and by 1995, Greenford was operating 110 midibuses. The standard vehicles the garage in the late 1990s were
Wright bodied
Renault midibuses and
Marshall minibuses, however both types had a bad reputation and did not last long in the CentreWest fleet. From late 2003 until 14 March 2009,
Ealing Community Transport operated
London Buses route 195 from the Greenford depot using garage code EY. In June 2013, Greenford garage was sold to Metroline along with all of the buses stationed there. Alperton passed to the CentreWest subsidiary with the break-up of London Regional Transport in April 1989. After CentreWest had become the first London Buses subsidiary to be privatised in a
management buyout in September 1994, buses based at Alperton were branded
Challenger as opposed to using the CentreWest Buses brand. By 1995, Alperton was also performing most of the maintenance for the Centrewest operation and had also become the home of the training fleet.
Uxbridge (UX) on
route U5 in
Uxbridge in August 2010 painted in the company's final livery, all-red with white First fleetnames, introduced in 2009
Uxbridge garage operated London bus routes
331,
607,
A10,
U1,
U2,
U3,
U4,
U5 and
U10.
History The original Uxbridge garage was located around half a mile outside Uxbridge itself on the Oxford Road and was built by the London General Omnibus Company in 1921. The garage passed to Thames Valley a year later, eventually being handed back to London General on 31 December 1928. When the
Greater London Council was created in 1965, Uxbridge was one of only three London Transport Central Area that fell outside the boundaries of the new
Greater London, instead located in the former county of
Middlesex. Following the Second World War, it was planned for Uxbridge garage to be rebuilt entirely. This, however, remained shelved, with the garage instead extended over an open parking area during 1954. A new Uxbridge garage was planned shortly afterwards, although construction work did not begin until 1979. The new garage, located next to
Uxbridge tube station and occupying the lower ground floor of a multi-use development, opened in late 1983. which themselves were replaced with 15
Northern Counties Palatine II bodied
Volvo Olympian double-deckers during 1996 to aid with capacity and frequency upgrades. In 1994, the garage was allocated some of London's first
low-floor buses, these being
Wright Pathfinder bodied
Dennis Lance SLFs with CentreWest branding for
route 222.
Westbourne Park (X) on
route 23 on the
Strand, circa 2001
Westbourne Park garage operated London bus routes
9 (Heritage),
70 and 24-hour routes
23 and
295.
History Westbourne Park Garage was part of the re-construction programme undertaken by the
London Transport Executive in the early 1980s. As was common practice at the time, the new garage replaced two older garages – the small and inadequate Middle Row (X), and the larger former trolley bus depot at
Stonebridge (SE). The new garage, which opened in 1981 on Great Western Road, is of unusual design in that it is built beneath the elevated A40 Westway, the roof of the garage being profiled to match the concrete flyover. Originally, the garage allocation consisted of
AEC Routemasters, and a small number of
Daimler Fleetlines to B20 "quiet" specification for Route 18. These were supplemented in 1983 by a number of
Leyland Titans for comparative trials. In December 1998, CentreWest launched the Gold Arrow brand for
routes 28 and
31 at Westbourne Park. This brand employed 16 seater
Alexander bodied
Mercedes-Benz 811D midibuses in an initiative by London Regional Transport to increase the frequency of the two routes by 60% at peak times. When privatised, Westbourne Park operated two routes operated by
AEC Routemasters,
routes 7 and
23. These were replaced by
Dennis Trident 2s in July 2004 and September 2003 respectively. In November 2005, Westbourne Park commenced operating
Heritage route 9 with a fleet of restored Routemasters. On 22 January 2006, an arson attack destroyed seven buses and damaged five others that were parked overnight at Westbourne Park. In June 2013, Westbourne Park garage was sold to Tower Transit along with all of the buses stationed there.
Willesden Junction (WJ) Willesden Junction garage operated London bus routes
18,
187,
206,
226,
228 and night route
N18. In June 2013, Willesden Junction garage was sold to Metroline along with all of the buses stationed there. ==References==