History Transport across the
Greater Manchester conurbation historically suffered from poor north–south connections due to the fact that Manchester's main railway stations,
Piccadilly and
Victoria, were built in the 1840s on peripheral locations outside
Manchester city centre. In the 1960s and 1970s, the public transport authority
SELNEC evaluated a number of proposals to connect Manchester's northern and southern rail terminals, including several types of
monorail systems and
metro-style systems. A scheme was promoted to build an underground rail link across Manchester city centre, known as the
Picc-Vic tunnel, but this failed to attract the necessary government funding and the project was cancelled in 1977. To address the problem of cross-city transit, the
Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive (SELNEC's successor) proposed a new circular shuttle bus service between Piccadilly and Victoria stations. The new
Centreline bus service was initially opposed by the Taxi Owners' Association, but was approved by the North Western
Traffic Commissioner. Centreline was first operated using a fleet of
Seddon Pennine IV midibuses, noted for their diminutive appearance. GMPTE also introduced an experimental
battery-electric bus onto Centreline, the Lucas Electric Bus, which was based on the Seddon chassis and body. This was Greater Manchester's second electric bus, the first being SELNEC's experimental
Silent Rider, but it was eventually taken out of service. Operated under the
Greater Manchester Transport brand, Centreline came into operation on 1 July 1974. Passengers were charged a flat fare of 2p for each journey.
Optare Solo on
Manchester route 1 in October 2009
Optare Solo on
Manchester route 2 in October 2007
Wright Eclipse Gemini 2 bodied
Volvo B5LH on free bus route 1 in September 2025 on free bus route 2 in July 2024 Centreline continued to provide inter-station transit links for several years. After
bus deregulation, the service was operated by
GM Buses. In 1992, the new
Metrolink light rail system began operating across Manchester city centre, providing an electric
tram link between the mainline stations, although Centreline continued to operate. The service was extremely successful.
Route 3 was introduced in September 2005 and links additional areas of the city centre. From 28 October 2018, due to declining passenger numbers, the service was reduced to 2 routes, and rebranded as
free bus. Both routes were taken over by
Go North West on 2 June 2019 with part of the First Greater Manchester business.
Partnership Manchester's Metroshuttle is a partnership between TfGM,
Manchester City Council,
National Car Parks and the property developer Allied London. The service is
zero-fare (free) and does not require any tickets or passes. The Manchester Metroshuttle network consisted of three services, each operated by
First Greater Manchester. The services were originally operated using a dedicated fleet of 18
Optare Solo minibuses with route branding applied for all services, Route 1 (orange), Route 2 (green), Route 3 (purple). In July 2014, three
electric Optare Versas were introduced. Metroshuttle bus stops also share the same route colour of the appropriate bus stopping there. Metroshuttle
route 1 and
route 2 began operating in September 2002 and replaced the previous Centreline
city centre operation. Allied London owned the
Spinningfields mixed-use development that was served by the route. and operated by
Go North West. From 28 October 2018 to 2024, free bus operated the following routes: • Route 1:
Piccadilly station -
Piccadilly Gardens -
Market Street -
Spinningfields -
St Peter's Square -
Chorlton Street coach station - Piccadilly station • Route 2:
Piccadilly station -
Oxford Road station -
Deansgate -
Victoria station -
Shudehill Interchange - the
Northern Quarter - Piccadilly station At peak hours (Monday to Friday, 06:30 – 09:10 and 16:00 – 18:30), route 2 additionally ran via
Salford Central station. Both services operated every 10 minutes during the day, every 15 minutes after 18:30, and every 12 minutes on Sundays and Bank Holidays.
2024 The new 2024 routes require a maximum of 4 buses per route, both routes are operated by
Stagecoach Manchester as part of the second trenche of
Bee Network. On non-bank holiday weekdays and Saturday evenings, only a single bus per route will be in half hourly operation. File:SCM 1 66081.jpg|Free bus route 1 File:SCM_2_66075.jpg|Free bus route 2 ==Bolton==