Urban Transit Authority

The Urban Transit Authority, a former statutory authority of the Government of New South Wales, was responsible for the operation and maintenance of buses and ferries in Sydney and Newcastle from July 1980 until January 1989.

Urban Transit Authority
Statutory Authority overview
Formed1 July 1980; 43 years ago (1980-07-01)
Preceding Statutory Authority
Dissolved15 January 1989; 35 years ago (1989-01-15)
Superseding agency
JurisdictionSydney
Newcastle
HeadquartersSydney
Key document

History edit

The Urban Transit Authority was established pursuant to the Transport Authorities Act 1980 (NSW) that separated the functions of the Public Transport Commission with the State Rail Authority taking responsibility for trains, and the Urban Transit Authority responsibility for buses and ferries.[1]

It was replaced in January 1989 by the State Transit Authority.[2]

Fleet edit

 
Ferries Karingal, Lady Street and Freshwater in Urban Transit Authority colours, Circular Quay, 1983

Urban Transit inherited a fleet 1,680 buses comprising Leyland Worldmasters, circa 740 Leopards, Atlanteans and 657 Mercedes-Benz O305s.[3] By 1987 the O305 fleet would total 1,287, the world's largest. These along with Mercedes-Benz O405s had replaced most of the Leylands when Urban Transit ceased.

The inherited ferry fleet consisted of five ferries dating from the 1910s (Kameruka, Kanangra, Karingal, Karrabee and Lady Edeline), seven Lady class ferries (Cutler, McKell, Woodward, Wakehurst, Northcott, Herron and Street), two Manly ferries (Baragoola and North Head) and five hydrofoils (Fairlight, Dee Why, Curl Curl, Long Reef and Palm Beach).[3]

Urban Transit introduced four Freshwater class ferries for the Manly service (Freshwater, Queenscliff, Collaroy and Narrabeen), two hydrofoils (Manly and Sydney) and nine First Fleet catamarans (Sirius, Supply, Alexander, Borrowdale, Charlotte, Fishburn, Friendship, Golden Grove and Scarborough).[4]

Services edit

Among the new services introduced by Urban Transit were route 111 Sydney Explorer in November 1980[3] and route 300 Circular Quay - Sydney Airport in 1982. Both were operated by Mercedes-Benz O305 buses in dedicated liveries.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Urban Transit Authority of New South Wales NSW Government State Records
  2. ^ "New name for Urban Transit" Fleetline February 1989 page 22
  3. ^ a b c Travers, Greg (1982). From City to Suburb...a fifty year journey. Sydney: Historic Commercial Vehicle Association. p. 200. ISBN 0 959601 6 27.
  4. ^ Sydney Ferries Fleet Facts Archived 12 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Transport for NSW