Bus Vannin
Bus Vannin - styled as bus vannin - is the government-owned and operated bus service on the Isle of Man. The name was adopted in June 2009 to replace Isle of Man Transport. The company was founded on 1 October 1976, as National Transport, which was an amalgamation of two other operating companies.
History
The first omnibus services on the island were provided by the Manxland Bus Co Limited, in addition to several smaller operators which operated independently. The primary means of longer-distance travel were the Isle of Man Railway to the west, south and north and the Manx Electric Railway on the east coast.When bus competition became a threat to the Isle of Man Railway, it bought out the bus company and operated it as Isle of Man Road Services in conjunction with the railway. In addition to the island-wide services, Douglas Corporation also operated a fleet of buses around the capital, distinctive by their yellow livery. As the railway company began to falter, it relied more heavily on the bus operation, and when the railway lines closed for the first time in 1965 the bus services were intensified to replace the rail services.
The vehicles of Road Services carried an all-over red livery with two off-white bands, and the Railway Company crest was modified to include a facsimile of a bus instead of a railway locomotive. The buses of Douglas Corporation, which only operated within the borough, carried an all-over yellow livery with two red bands and corporation crest.
Both operators used the bus station on Lord Street in Douglas as their base. Today, this site has been given over to a car park, whilst buses use roadside lay-bys on Lord Street itself. The two companies operated services independently from this site until the operations began to falter in the early 1970s at which time government intervention was required to ensure continued operation.
Nationalisation
When the service was bought by the Isle of Man government in 1976 the buses carried National Transport logos and a new livery, predominantly of red with white trim, having previously carried a variation of this colour scheme under the Road Services banner. The publicly-owned service used many second-hand vehicles from the United Kingdom and Ireland, a practice which continued until relatively recently, from a variety of sources including Liverpool Corporation, Preston Borough Transport and Ribble Motor Services. Such vehicle types included Leyland Atlanteans from Merseyside PTE, Portsmouth City Transport, SELNEC and Tyne & Wear PTE, Leyland Olympians from Devon General, Dublin Bus and Stagecoach, and Leyland Lynxes from Halton Transport.By 1987, when a new management scheme was under way, a revised livery of cream and red was introduced, and Isle of Man Transport adopted as the title, using a similar design motif to all the island's government departments including a triskelion motif. During this period the buses carried a variety of advertisements along their side panels, with several distinctive buses carrying all-over advertising for local businesses including the Gaiety Theatre, Lombard Bank, Curraghs Wildlife Park and the National Coal Board.
A further change of leadership in 1999 saw the introduction of brand-new buses and gradual phasing out of older stock, latterly used only on school services, and the advertising policy changed resulting in no advertisements appearing at all. By 2009 a further change of policy resulted in the reintroduction of advertisements which has proved popular, with local radio stations, estate agents, travel agents and cinemas taking advantage of the new schemes.
Branding
The government-owned bus service on the island came into being in 1976 as National Transport, taking over from both the Road Services and Douglas Corporation Transport, operated by the municipal authority. The vehicles were liveried in an all-over red colour scheme, later changed to include wide white banding; although with the fleet consisting of a wide selection of different second hand vehicles the uniform appearance was not successful. By 1987 the white banding had become cream in colour, and the full Isle of Man Transport name was added to all vehicles. During the period up to 1997 advertising panels were carried on the sides of some vehicles, and, in certain cases, all-over advertising was used.In April 2009, eleven new Wright Eclipse Gemini 2 bodied Volvo B9TLs were added to the fleet, carrying a maroon and cream livery with the Bus Vannin branding which is now used in all literature and timetabling information. Not all of the fleet carries this new livery, however the Wright StreetLites that entered service in 2010 were delivered in the new livery although the overall colour scheme is largely cream with some maroon detailing, the opposite of the 2009 deliveries.
In 2010 Hullad Oie late night services were introduced into the timetable; they operate at weekends into the early hours, serving the satellite towns from Douglas departing at about midnight. Totems at bus stops are in the process of being updated to the new maroon scheme. Text also appears in Manx Gaelic on these, and digital destination displays on the vehicles also have an option to show the place names in the language as well.
Between 2011 and 2013, thirty Mercedes-Benz Citaro LE single deckers were delivered; these are presented in a silver-grey livery with Bus Vannin decals - this being the new standard livery for all buses in the Bus Vannin fleet.
The bus service continues to be operated by the government but is now more clearly segregated from the railways, which are now called Isle of Man Heritage Railways though they remain managed by the same group.
Operations
Bus stations
There are three bus depots on the island which provide passenger facilities and storage areas for off-duty buses. At Port Erin and at Ramsey, these are combined at one location, while in Douglas the Banks Circus site has a workshop and bus yard, with no passenger facilities. The passenger facilities provided at all the bus stations are limited, and some facilities are only open at certain times of the day.- Douglas : shelters only
- Port Erin : toilets, waiting area
- Ramsey : toilets, waiting room
Depots
The yard at Port Erin is on the site of former railway platforms whilst the original garage now houses the Port Erin Railway Museum which opened in 1975; the current garage was built as a replacement the following year and remains open today.
- Douglas
- Port Erin
- Ramsey
Routes
Late night bus services were introduced to the island in September 2009 and are known as Hullad Oie, Manx for "night owl". The three routes depart Lord Street in the capital of Douglas on Fri and Sat nights at 00:15 and 01:15 serving the towns of Port St Mary, Ramsey and Peel. The single fare on a Hullad Oie Night Owl service is double the normal adult fare for the journey undertaken. These fare conditions apply to any journeys departing after midnight. Over the Christmas 2020 period the Hullad Oie Night Owl services operated Friday and Saturday evenings from 4 to 19 December departing from Douglas at the usual times. In March 2021 the services were paused for period during a COVID-19 lockdown.
In 2022, service frequencies had to be reduced due to driver shortages.
Most bus routes frequently have letters affixed to the main number to signify an alteration in the main route. For example, routes 1h, 21h, 22h and 25h are all variations of their original routes that terminate at Nobles Hospital. Private hire or school buses are reserved with numbers 30-99.
| # | Timetable Colour | Primary Route | Variations |
| 1 | Red | Nobles Hospital - Douglas - Ronaldsway Airport - Castletown - Port Erin | 1a, 1h, N1, TT1* |
| 2 | Red | Ballachrink - Douglas - Ronaldsway Airport - Castletown - Port Erin | 2a |
| 3 | Pink | Douglas - Laxey - Ramsey | 3a, N3, TT3*, X3 |
| 4 | Blue | Douglas - Foxdale - St. Johns - Peel - Nirabyl | 4b, 4n |
| 5 | Purple | Douglas - Nobles Hospital - St. Johns - Peel - Kirk Michael - Ramsey | 5a, 5c, 5j, N5 |
| 6 | Purple | Douglas - St. Johns - Peel | 6a, 6c, 6f, N6c*, TT6* |
| 8 | Lime | Peel - St. Johns - Ronaldsway Airport - Castletown - Port Erin - Sound | 8s |
| 11 | Red | Wilaston - Douglas - Ronaldsway Airport - Castletown - Port Erin | 11a |
| 12 | Red | Wilaston - Douglas - Ronaldsway Airport - Castletown - Port Erin | 12a |
| 14 | Blue | Douglas - Foxdale - Castletown | 14b, 14c |
| 15 | Blue | Douglas - Onchan | 15b |
| 16 | Turquoise | Ramsey - Maughold | 16b, 16d |
| 17k | Orange | Ramsey - Jurby | |
| 18a | Orange | Ramsey - Jurby | 18k |
| 19 | Purple | Ramsey - Jurby | 19c |
| 20 | Dark Blue | Ramsey - Jurby | 20a |
| 21 | Gold | Douglas - Farmhill | 21b, 21h |
| 22 | Green | Douglas - Onchan - Nobles Hospital | 22a, 22h, 22k*, 22v* |
| 25 | Green | Douglas - Onchan | 25b, 25h |
| 29 | Gold | Douglas - Port Soderick |