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Greater Manchester bus route 52

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52
Bee Network branded Stagecoach Manchester Volvo B8L at Eccles Interchange February 2025
Overview
OperatorStagecoach Manchester
GarageQueens Road
VehicleVolvo B8L
Enviro300
PredecessorsFirst Manchester
Go North West
Route
StartTrafford Centre
Via
EndFailsworth Tesco
Service
LevelDaily
Frequency10-60 mins

Greater Manchester bus route 52 is a Bee Network contracted bus route in Greater Manchester, England. Running between Trafford Centre and Failsworth, it is operated by Stagecoach Manchester.

History

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Greater Manchester's bus route 52 was launched on October 25, 1986 by GM Buses. Before May 31, 1988, route 52 operated as a circular service connecting areas such as Old Trafford, Pendleton, Cheetham Hill, Miles Platting, Ashburys, Belle Vue, Longsight, Hulme, Stretford Road, and Chorlton. This extensive loop around Manchester was eventually withdrawn after two years, allowing altering and spliting of both routes 52 and 53 offerring a more direct service[1]

After the deregulation of bus services in the UK in 1986, [2] GM Buses were split into GM Buses North and GM Buses South while the route were operated by the former that time, which later became First Manchester.

When the route was passed to Go North West, route 52, along with route 53, was branded as "Manchester's Orbits" [3] and received a fleet of 12 Enviro 200s, featured a distinctive orange livery. This branding initiative aimed to highlight the routes' role in connecting various suburbs without necessitating travel into the city center.

On 24 March 2024, following the commissioning of tranche 2 of Bee Network franchising, the Queens Road depot, along with this route, were acquired by Stagecoach Manchester. A fleet of new MCV Evora bodied Volvo B8L, painted in Bee Network yellow, were allocated by Stagecoach Manchester on this route to operate along with its Enviro300 acquired from First Manchester.

Service pattern

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The 52 has numerous service patterns which generally operate every 30-60 minutes. Which serving overlapping areas of patterns up to every 10 minutes.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Manchester D-Day 26/10/86 "Routes 50 – 99 – We started to go in circles and playing tennis with our buses". {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  2. ^ "Greater Manchester Transport And Beyond". The SELNEC Preservation Society. Archived from the original on 28 January 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  3. ^ "Go North West's Manchester's Orbits launch". CBW. Retrieved 20 October 2024.
  4. ^ "52 The Trafford Centre - Eccles - Moston - Failsworth". Transport for Greater Manchester. Retrieved 13 February 2025.
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