More SBS Transit WAB services from December November 29, 2009
Posted by hafizbam in Bus, Deployment Updates, SBS Transit.Tags: SBS Transit, wheelchair-accessible bus
add a comment
The following eight SBS Transit bus services will be formally classified as wheelchair-accessible effective 3rd December 2009:
13: Yio Chu Kang – Bishan – Upper East Coast Road
15: Pasir Ris – Kaki Bukit – Marine Parade Road
36: Changi Airport – Marine Parade – Tomlinson Road
52: Bishan – Upper Thomson - Jurong East
54: Bishan – Thomson – New Bridge Road
57: Bishan – HarbourFront – Bukit Merah
291: Tampines – Tampines Street 83 & 33
333: Jurong East – Jurong East Street 32
The launch date has been timed to coincide with this year’s World Disability Day.
There is no formal press release by the company yet, though you can see this update here.
SMRT, Brickston likely to run Singapore’s first hybrid buses November 15, 2009
Posted by hafizbam in Bus, Fleet News, Miscellaneous, Private operators, SBS Transit, SMRT, Something New, Transport Events.Tags: ALP Energy, Brickston Transport, hybrid bus, King Long, smrt buses, ST Kinetics
add a comment
LATEST UPDATE:
ST Kinetics has announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between itself, King Long Singapore and Brickston Transport Services which will see Brickston becoming Singapore’s first bus company to trial a fleet of King Long low-floor city buses fitted with ST Kinetics’ hyPower hybrid electric technology.
Why private operator Brickston seems to be so keen in getting these low-floor city buses remains a question though, since it currently deals mainly with coach charter services such as worker transport. It could be just a way to reduce costs (since the hybrid bus has proven to be able to save up to 30% in fuel consumption) or the start of bigger things to come – like bidding for public bus services when the industry is opened up in the near future.

ST article photo, scanned by Lau Kai Guan.
THE DIESEL-ELECTRIC BUSES CONSUME 30% LESS FUEL AND ARE DISABLED-FRIENDLY
JUST a week after a taxi operator rolled out Singapore’s first hybrid taxis, two green buses are set to hit the roads here.
The buses, which run on a combination of diesel and battery power, are said to use up to 30 per cent less fuel than conventional ones.
As a result, their tailpipe emissions, which are harmful to the environment, will also be cut.
The buses, assembled in China, were the result of a joint venture led by ST Kinetics, a Singapore engineering company better known for its military vehicles.
ST Kinetics teamed up with two other companies to make the hybrid buses: Chinese bus-maker King Long, which supplied the chassis, and ALP Energy, which supplied the lithium battery management system.
The latter is owned by Singapore-born businessman Lim Loong Keng, who is now a Canadian.
ST Kinetics is currently in talks with two bus operators about running trials for the buses.
The Straits Times understands they are SMRT Corp and Brickston Transport, a company whose main business is ferrying factory workers.
ST Kinetics hopes to convince the two firms of the buses’ viability during the trial, and hopes they will order more such coaches in future.
Brickston’s owner Colin Gan, 50, is already swayed by the prospect of lower running costs. ‘First and foremost, it can save fuel. And then it’s also green.
‘I’ve told them, if everything is set, I’m prepared to take 10 coaches.’
An SMRT spokesman would say only that the firm was ’studying the feasibility of adding eco-friendly alternatives, including hybrid buses, to our bus fleet’.
ST Kinetics has dabbled in so-called ‘alternative energy’ vehicles in the past. Since 1997, it has invested more than $80 million in start-ups dealing with such vehicles in the United States, China and South Korea.
Last year, it had a commercial breakthrough when it delivered a fleet of hybrid baggage tow trucks to Changi Airport. In electric mode, the trucks were found to be suitable for the enclosed, air-conditioned areas they often operate in.
The two hybrid buses will be the first diesel-electric vehicles to ply public roads here. The hybrid cars and taxis here are petrol-electric.
Besides their green credentials, the buses also comply with the latest government requirements for public buses – they provide wheelchair-accessibility, for example.
The one drawback of the buses: Cost. At $500,000 apiece, they are between 25 per cent and 30 per cent more expensive than conventional buses.
Bus operators The Straits Times spoke to cited this as a potential hurdle to adopting the vehicles. The uncertainty of the new technology is another, they added.
However, ST Kinetics general manager Mah Chi Jui pointed out that the vehicles’ lower fuel costs mean long-term savings for the operators.
A bus company would take just three years to recoup the extra money spent on a green bus, he said.
Meanwhile, Singapore’s biggest bus company, SBS Transit, said it is also exploring the possibility of buying hybrid buses.
The company has some experience with green buses – SBS Transit already runs 12 compressed natural gas variants here.
In addition, its parent group, ComfortDelGro Corp, owns London public bus operator Metroline, which is currently trying out five hybrid buses there.
A ComfortDelGro spokesman said the London trials have been successful.
Between them, SBS Transit and SMRT operate close to 4,000 buses. There are another 2,500 or so private buses with 35 seats or more. The vast majority run on diesel.
- The Straits Times, page B1, Saturday November 14 2009
SMRT brings in Southeast Asia’s first Mercedes Benz Citaro! November 6, 2009
Posted by hafizbam in Bus, Fleet News, SMRT, Something New, Transport Events.Tags: BlueTec technology, Citaro, Mercedes Benz, SMRT
2 comments

A sneak peek at Southeast Asia's first Mercedes Benz Citaro. Photo courtesy of Ho Kok Pern.
Singapore’s bus enthusiasts got all excited this week after learning that the country’s second biggest public bus operator – SMRT Buses – has brought in what everyone has been wishing for: the award-winning Mercedes Benz Citaro citybus!
The Mercedes-Benz Citaro (or O530) is the current Mercedes-Benz/EvoBus mainstream bus intended for public transport, introduced in 1997 and replaced the Mercedes-Benz O405/O405N series. Manufactured in Mannheim (Germany), Ligny-en-Barrois (France) and Sámano (Spain), it features a low floor for easy access.
There is currently one unit resting within the Cycle & Carriage compounds in Teban Gardens. Word has it that it has been imported wholesale from Germany and is awaiting modifications to meet local specifications before hitting the roads. While there are no SMRT logos on the bus, one will definitely not go wrong guessing which company it belongs to from the common red, black and white livery already applied on its body.
Daimler’s press release confirmed SMRT’s order for 66 units of the bus, which features the BlueTec diesel technology already widely used in Europe.
BlueTec in Asia
Singapore Mass Rapid Transit (SMRT) is the first company in Southeast Asia to put Mercedes-Benz urban buses with BlueTec 5 into operation in short-distance public transport. This means that the BlueTec diesel technology so successfully introduced by Daimler in Europe now also has a presence in Asia. And with an order for 66 Mercedes-Benz Citaro BlueTec urban buses that meet the stringent Euro 5 exhaust standard, the SMRT Corporation in Singapore is setting new benchmarks in Southeast Asia.
This is the third wheelchair-accessible bus model to be brought in by SMRT in the last two years. The first came in the form of Mercedes Benz OC500LEs in Gemilang bodywork, with the second being Singapore’s first Chinese public citybus – a Yutong ZK6126.
Further details with regards to this bus will be posted on this website as and when updates stream in.
You may read more about this bus here.
Premium bus service 586 returns… in Yishun! October 25, 2009
Posted by hafizbam in Bus, Express Coach, Premium Bus, Private operators, Something New.Tags: Bus Hub Services, premium bus service, private bus operator, shenton way, springleaf, yishun
add a comment

SBS Transit is now no longer the only bus operator providing premium bus services in Yishun town. Private bus operator Bus Hub Services Pte Ltd has been running a new route from the estate to the CBD on weekday mornings, soon after gaining approval from the Public Transport Council (PTC) in April 2009.
In true Bus Hub style, the service has been dubbed the Yishun Express and interestingly, officially numbered 586. Some Bukit Panjang residents may recall seeing a bus service with the same number running in their estate some months back. That was the SMRT Buses version of 586, which got scrapped due to low demand (and why wouldn’t it, paying 4 bucks to get to Jurong East just isn’t worth it!). So if this reborn 586 does succeed, it would definitely be a snub at SMRT, especially so when the service is running in their traditional operating territory!
Just like its two other premium bus services 562 and 576, Yishun Express 586 targets the residents of private housing who are more likely to work in a downtown office as compared to the typical HDB dweller. Along the way however, it does serve a bit of the Yishun HDB crowd missed out by SBS Transit’s 558 and 559.
The route starts at Canberra Drive serving residents of Yishun Sapphire and Yishun Emerald, calling at the bus stops outside the Darul Makmur Mosque and Yishun Community Library soon after. From there it proceeds to pick up passengers from the Lilydale, Shaughnessy and Orchid Park condominiums before heading to Sembawang and Upper Thomson Roads to fetch those residing in Springside and Springleaf estates. From there, the bus cruises along the expressways down to City Hall, Shenton Way and ending at the stop opposite Hong Lim Complex along Upper Cross Street.
If demand from SMRT’s 587* is anything to go by, this service should have a ready pool of customers, especially so when its coverage in the city area is much greater than the simple Shenton Way-only offerings. Again, this can only happen if the targeted crowd knows about Yishun Express’ very existence since private operators rarely display their bus service information at bus stops. *(SMRT’s 587 is also a premium route targeting those from the LaCasa, Rosewood, Casablanca and Woodgrove private housing, serving pockets of HDB residents along the way.)
And yes, the total journey time for Yishun Express end-to-end is only an hour at most as stated in their website. A flat fare of $4 per trip is payable, though regular commuters can save up by purchasing the monthly booking at $80. And for a limited time only, Bus Hub is offering an introductory monthly booking discounted fare of only $70.
More information can be found in Bus Hub’s website.
Eight more SBS Transit wheelchair accessible services October 18, 2009
Posted by hafizbam in Bus, Deployment Updates, SBS Transit.Tags: SBS Transit, wheelchair-accessible bus
add a comment

Official press release from SBS Transit.
The following SBS Transit routes will officially become wheelchair accessible bus (WAB) services from Monday 26 October 2009.
3 : Tampines – Pasir Ris – Punggol
27 : Hougang Central – Sengkang – Tampines – Changi Airport
34 : Punggol – Tampines – Changi Airport
53 : Bishan – Hougang South – Pasir Ris – Changi Airport
142 : Toa Payoh – Potong Pasir
293 : Tampines feeder service
358 : Pasir Ris feeder service
410 : Bishan – Upper Thomson Road feeder service
They join the other 22 SBS Transit services which are already WAB services:
2, 7, 12, 14, 21, 51, 64, 72, 76, 80, 123, 130, 143, 147, 174, 183, 185, 196, 198, 199, 232 and 268;
as well as 7 SMRT Buses WAB services:
171, 172, 189, 307, 811, 851 and 945.
Unlike wheelchair accessible bus routes in London where the whole bus fleet is as such once the route is converted to WAB, passengers-in-wheelchairs in Singapore still have to look out for the wheelchair logo decal to ascertain whether the bus they intend to board is meant for them.
Regular maintenance plus dual-depot controls and a relatively big fleet of non-wheelchair accessible buses still in operation can still mess up the WAB schedules from time to time, resulting in lengthened gaps between one WAB and another.
Travel Malaysia Fair 2009 October 17, 2009
Posted by hafizbam in Bus, Express Coach, Miscellaneous, Transport Events.Tags: EBAA, express bus agency association, five stars tours, hasry singapore, konsortium express & tours, lapan lapan travel, luxury tours & travel, malaysia tourism, regent star travel, sri maju tours & travel, Suntec City, Transtar Travel, travel malaysia fair, WTS travel & tours
add a comment
What: Travel Malaysia Fair 2009 (includes display of 8 express bus coaches) – admission is free!
When: 16 to 18 October 2009, Friday to Sunday; 1000 to 2130 hours
Where: Suntec Singapore Convention Centre Hall 404
How: By train: Alight at City Hall station and walk through CityLink Mall or take the free shuttle bus from the bus stop at Coleman Street. By bus: 10, 10e, 14, 16, 36, 70, 70M, 97, 106, 107M, 111, 133, 162M, 196, 196e, 502, 518, 531, 541, 546, 547, 597, 700A, 857, NR1

http://www.ebaa.sg
Express Bus Agencies Association (EBAA) is pleased to present once again our annual edition of Travel Malaysia 2009 travel fair to be held on 16th – 18th October 2009 at Hall 404, Suntec Convention Centre. The three days event will be the largest and most comprehensive tourism exhibition on Malaysia as a favourite destination for the year end holidays. The three days event is expected to draw a crowd turnout of about 30,000.
In cooperation with Tourism Malaysia, the main highlights of the event are the State Pavilions where the various states of Malaysia flaunt a unique mélange of attractions and holiday destinations as well as a multitude of special products. The fair will also showcase and display the state of the art and most up to date exclusive express bus and coaches by EBAA member companies.
Travel Malaysia 2009 is supported by Malaysia Tourism Promotional Board (MTPB) as the Title Sponsor and is co-sponsored by AIG, Genting International, Awana Resort, OCBC Bank and Star Cruises. Travel Malaysia 2009 includes key exhibitors from the tour and travel industries, hotel and resort, theme park, golf and recreation resorts, service provider of transport, travel agents, eco tourism, property investment, health tourism, shopping, entertainment, adventure holidays and NTOs from Malaysia.
A total of 85 exhibitors occupying a floor area of 4,000 sqm comprising 133 booths and display of 8 premium express buses will be put up for the event. Of these 133 booths, 60 booths were allocated to Tourism Malaysia HQ for their exhibitors by the respective state tourism boards.
Extracted from Suntec Singapore’s calendar of events and http://www.ebaa.sg/.
Members of the EBAA include Transtar Travel, Five Stars Tours, Lapan Lapan Travel, Sri Maju Tours & Travel, Regent Star Travel, Konsortium Express & Tours, Luxury Tours & Travel, WTS Travel & Tours and Hasry Singapore. Something that might be interesting to note – both SMRT Bus Plus and ComfortDelGro Bus are associate members of this grouping as well.


