British Coachways

British Coachways
Preserved Plaxton bodied Volvo B58 in January 2011
FoundedOctober 1980
Ceased operationOctober 1982
Service typeLong distance coach operator
Routes6
HubsLondon
Annual ridership750,000
OperatorBarton Transport
Ellerman Bee Line
Excelsior Coaches
Grey-Green
Morris Bros
Park's Motor Group
Shearings
Wallace Arnold
York's
Warner Fairfax

British Coachways was a consortium of independent coach operating companies in the United Kingdom. Formed immediately after the deregulation of coach services in October 1980, it competed with the state-owned National Express and Scottish Bus Group on a range of long-distance routes. Initially composed of six members, it varied in size and composition over its two years of operation to include a range of ten different companies.

The consortium attempted to draw passengers away from the established services by charging significantly lower fares than the existing operators. National Express and Scottish Bus Group responded by reducing fares to similar levels, reducing the appeal of British Coachways' services. In contrast to National Express, operators were given the choice of which vehicle type to operate, so a variety of types were used.

The consortium was not granted access to large facilities in major cities, such as Victoria Coach Station in London, and was forced to use less developed alternative sites. In October 1982 British Coachways was broken up and the brand name abandoned. All but one of its services ceased to operate. The sole survivor was the service between London and Bournemouth, which continued to be operated by former British Coachways member Excelsior Coaches until 1998.

History

Background and creation

Prior to 1980, the majority of long-distance coach services in the United Kingdom were operated by National Express Coaches (NEX), a subsidiary of the state-owned National Bus Company (NBC), which sourced its vehicles from other NBC subsidiaries. Coach services in Scotland, including routes between Scotland and England, were operated by the subsidiaries of the Scottish Bus Group (SBG), which was also state-owned. On 6 October 1980, the coach service market was deregulated by the Transport Act 1980.[1]

To compete effectively with the large and well-recognised network operated by the state-owned companies, a group of established independent coach operators decided to form a consortium to run over a range of routes. The group initially comprised Wallace Arnold, based in Leeds; Grey-Green, operating from London; Shearings of Altrincham; Morris Bros of Swansea; Ellerman Bee Line, of Middlesbrough; and Park's Motor Group, based in Hamilton. The six companies owned a combined fleet of over 700 coaches. The consortium chose the name British Coachways to present a nationwide image, and a small number of coaches received a new livery of white, red and blue to advertise the venture.[2]

Into service and problems

British Coachways began operation on the day that coach services were deregulated, 6 October 1980, on a network based around five service corridors linking London with major population centres.[3] To make its services attractive to passengers, the consortium charged extremely low fares, including some that were less than half of the cheapest fare offered by the rival NEX or SBG service. This meant that profit margins were very low. In addition, the venture suffered from not being able to use recognised departure points in some major cities, most notably Victoria Coach Station in London and Digbeth Coach Station in Birmingham.[2]

The lower fares were intended to draw passengers away from the established services. However, within weeks of British Coachways commencing operation National Express cut their fares to match those offered by the consortium, reducing the appeal of the new routes.[2] In Scotland the change was equally dramatic. Prior to deregulation, the cheapest fare offered by SBG between London and Glasgow was £23. British Coachways undercut this with a £15 return fare, which was also hoped to attract more passengers away from British Rail's services between the two cities.[4] By May 1981, the consortium had increased its fare to £17, while SBG was charging only £15 for the same journey.[5] Additional competition on the corridor was provided by Cotters Tours, which introduced a more expensive high-quality service between London and Glasgow in December 1980.[6]

Passenger numbers were reasonable in the first year of the venture, but low compared to those achieved by the established services. In May 1981, it was reported that British Coachways' London-Glasgow service was carrying around 1,500 passengers per week, while the competing SBG service managed around 4,000 passengers per week over the same period.[5] Loadings on British Coachways services were around half the capacity provided in its first year, although there was considerable variation between routes and journeys. The venture broke even but made no profit at the end of the 1980/81 financial year.[7]

At the end of the first year of operation, the consortium had carried 750,000 passengers in total. Over the same period, NEX carried 12.5 million people over its network. Despite the introduction of British Coachways' competing routes, NEX's net profit increased by over 50% between 1980 and 1981.[2]

Members of the consortium began to pull out in April 1981.[8] By the summer of 1981 both Wallace Arnold and Grey-Green left the group; by the end of the year, both were operating joint services with National Express. However, Barton Transport and Excelsior Coaches joined in their place. The total number of services was not reduced, although some destinations were no longer served, while others were introduced to the network for the first time.[2]

Decline and break-up

The exit from the group of Wallace Arnold and Grey-Green had seen more responsibility transferred to Shearings, now the largest of the six surviving members of British Coachways. When it pulled out in August 1982, sustaining the operations of the consortium became difficult. Morris Bros also left British Coachways in the summer of 1982, leaving the group with just four constituent companies. On 18 October 1982, the consortium found itself without a terminus in London when the site it had been using became unavailable. Services ceased operation from this date onwards.[2]

Operations

British Coachways initially operated six services linking London to a range of large provincial towns and cities. Services were operated from London to Newcastle and Middlesbrough; to Sheffield, Leeds and Bradford; to Swansea via Cardiff; to Plymouth and Torbay via Bristol; to Glasgow via Birmingham and Manchester; and to Liverpool via Birmingham. In each case, the terminal point was located close to a depot owned by one of the consortium's members, and the majority of workings were operated by the company whose region the service ran to. Grey-Green, who were based in London, operated journeys on all six routes.[9]

The routes from Devon and Wales also served London Heathrow Airport. Glasgow and Liverpool were served twice per day; the other routes ran once daily with additional journeys on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. The sole exception to this pattern was the Torbay service, operated by the Devon subsidiary of Wallace Arnold, which ran twice daily four days a week and did not operate on the other three days.[9]

With Victoria Coach Station unavailable as a London terminus, the operation instead used the then-new Kings Cross Coach Station, on the site of a former railway goods yard near St Pancras station, which had few passenger or employee facilities. The site is now occupied by the British Library. In 1982 this was changed to the London Ryan Hotel in King's Cross.[2] Similar issues were encountered in other cities: in Glasgow, a small stop on Holland Street was initially used, while in Manchester services picked up at an unmarked stop in Aytoun Street.[6] From August 1981, a new Glasgow terminal in Sauchiehall Street was opened by Park's for use by British Coachways and other independent coach operators.[10]

Journey times offered by British Coachways between the major cities were often quicker than those on the corresponding NEX or SBG services, as intermediate locations were omitted. NEX responded to this by following a similar policy: for example, the journey time between London and Manchester reduced from over five hours prior to deregulation to around four hours after British Coachways began competing on the corridor.[8]

The withdrawal of Wallace Arnold from the group in 1981 meant that the services to Yorkshire and Devon no longer came under the British Coachways network. Excelsior Coaches brought with it a service from London to Bournemouth and Poole. Operations ceased on 17 October 1982 when the London Ryan Hotel ceased to be available as a terminus. Many of the operators involved continued to operate some of their routes as joint services with National Express.[2]

Brand and marketing

The companies that formed British Coachways in 1980 believed that a strong marketing campaign would be required to counter the established network offered by the incumbent operators. Wallace Arnold, the largest of the six founding members, and Grey-Green, the only constituent company based in London, designed the marketing used to promote British Coachways in its first year. A striking new livery of white, red and blue incorporating the Union Flag similar to that used by the state-owned airline British Airways was introduced for publicity material and vehicles, and the patriotic slogan "Ride the flag" used.[2]

A small number of coaches owned by the six members were painted into the consortium's livery, although the majority remained in the liveries of their owners. Promotional leaflets were issued to publicise the venture. These included timetables and fare information, together with content about the individual operators behind the group. Advantages claimed over rival services included significantly lower fares than competing coach and rail services, the age and quality of coaches used, ease of booking and the expertise and history of the operators involved.[2]

Mike Kay was appointed marketing director for the consortium, and received interviews in local newspapers to complement the advertising campaign.[4] When both Wallace Arnold and Grey-Green left British Coachways in 1981, marketing responsibilities passed to Shearings; after the latter company itself left the group in August 1982, national marketing campaigns ceased, although the remaining operators continued to market services within their local regions.[2]

Despite its efforts, British Coachways was unable to challenge National Express in terms of creating a nationally known brand. The individual members were well-known only in their home areas, and the advertising campaign was constrained by a lack of flexibility and capital. NEX was known nationally and possessed significant levels of customer awareness and goodwill.[8]

Vehicles

One significant difference between National Express and British Coachways was the type of coaches used on services. NEX required that vehicles used on its services were built to its specifications. In the early 1980s, all NBC subsidiaries with NEX work used Leyland Leopards with Plaxton bodywork.[11] British Coachways had no such requirement. Vehicle types were decided by the operators themselves, so a wide range of types were used.[2]

The Leyland Leopard proved popular with some members of British Coachways, including Ellerman Bee Line, Barton Transport, Wallace Arnold and Grey-Green, although the latter specified Duple bodywork instead of Plaxton.[2] Other operators contributed different types. Morris Bros of Swansea used Volvo B58 coaches on its routes from South Wales to London.[12] The most varied fleet, however, was that of Park's, which contained Leyland Leopards, DAF SB2005 integrals[6] and a small number of rare MAN SR280s imported from Germany.[13]

Subsequent history and legacy

The dissolution of British Coachways in October 1982 led to the withdrawal of all but one of its former routes by the four surviving constituent companies. Many of the companies went on to operate as contractors for National Express.[2] The only route to continue was Excelsior's London-Poole service, which operated in competition with National Express until February 1998, when it was taken over by the larger operator.[14]

The competition created by the 1980 Transport Act caused NEX's market share to reduce temporarily, although its passenger numbers increased in real terms. The lower fares, improved vehicle quality and better timetabling introduced after deregulation meant that its market share had recovered within three years. These improvements have since been attributed to the quality and cost of services offered by competing operators.[2][11]

After the demise of British Coachways, National Express faced little competition for two decades. By 2001, significant competition by independents had reduced to only two routes, including the London-Glasgow corridor previously served by British Coachways.[15] This situation continued until 2003, when the Stagecoach Group introduced its Megabus network. This differed from British Coachways by providing more frequent services over a wider range of routes, and in its use of nationwide advertising and yield management to set fares, with early bookers to a particular coach paying only £1 for a journey.[16]

British Coachways' brand and livery disappeared rapidly after 1982. Vehicles were quickly painted back into their owners' liveries, and the brand was abandoned. However, in September 2010, a preserved Volvo B58 coach, new to Morris Bros, was painted into British Coachways livery for the thirtieth anniversary of the consortium's formation.[12]

References

  1. ^ Townsin, Alan (1992). "Coach deregulation arrives". The British Bus Story – The Early '80s: The Die is Cast. The Transport Publishing Company. pp. 21–22. ISBN 0-86317-170-2.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Townsin (1980) pp.22–28
  3. ^ "BC starts on October 6" Commercial Motor 27 September 1980 page 24
  4. ^ a b Cunningham, Jennifer (27 September 1980). "New bus group throws down the gauntlet in fares battle". The Herald.
  5. ^ a b "Fares battle steps up on route south". The Herald. 28 May 1981.
  6. ^ a b c Parke, John; Morris, Stephen (June 1981). "On the coach roads of Britain: Competition on the road to Scotland". Buses (315). Ian Allan Publishing: 252–255.
  7. ^ James, Norman (September 1981). "1980 Transport Act: success or failure". Buses (318). Ian Allan Publishing: 400–403.
  8. ^ a b c Vickers, John; Yarrow, George (1988). Privatization: an economic analysis. MIT Press. pp. 372–373. ISBN 0-262-72011-6. british coachways.
  9. ^ a b Parke, John; Morris, Stephen (November 1980). "Competitive coach plans". Buses (308). Ian Allan Publishing: 203–205.
  10. ^ Morris, Stephen (September 1981). "Glasgow coach terminal for independents". Buses (318). Ian Allan Publishing: 406.
  11. ^ a b Morris, Stephen (Autumn 1996). "1986 and all that". Buses Focus. Ian Allan Publishing: 5–8.
  12. ^ a b Millar, Alan (November 2010). "The flag rides proudly after 30 years". Buses (668). Ian Allan Publishing: 76.
  13. ^ MacDonald, Sandy (November 2010). "Scotland since 1950: 1980". Buses (668). Ian Allan Publishing: 67.
  14. ^ Report of the hundred and fourteenth Round Table on Transport Economics, held in Paris on 11th–12th March 1999 on the following topic: regular interurban coach services in Europe. OECD Publishing. 2001. p. 90. ISBN 92-821-1262-4.
  15. ^ White, Peter (2001). Public transport: its planning, management, and operation. Routledge. pp. 164–165. ISBN 0-415-25772-7.
  16. ^ Page, Stephen (2006). Tourism Management: Managing for Change. Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 168. ISBN 0-7506-8205-1.

Further reading

  • Bateman, Ken; Woodliffe, Owen (1983). Rise and Fall of British Coachways. Rochester Press. ISBN 0-946379-17-3.

Read other articles:

This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (June 2022) This is a list of ships and classes of the Soviet Navy. Corvettes In the Soviet Navy these were classified as small anti-submarine ships (MPK) or small missile ships (MRK). Kronshtadt class (projects 122A, 122bis) Poti class (project 204) Grisha class (project 1124 Al'batros) Grisha I class (project 1124.1), 37 ships built in 1966–1982 Grisha II class (project 1124P, P stands for pogranichnyi – on the border), 20 ...

 

 

Jennette McCurdyAlbum studio karya Jennette McCurdyDirilis05 Juni 2012 (2012-06-05)GenreCountryDurasi34:40LabelCapitol NashvilleProduserPaul WorleyJay DeMarcusKronologi Jennette McCurdy Jennette McCurdy (EP)(2012)Jennette McCurdy (EP)2012 Jennette McCurdy(2012) Singel dalam album Jennette McCurdy Generation LoveDirilis: April 25, 2011 Jennette McCurdy adalah sebuah album studio pertama dari penyanyi-penulis lagu Amerika Serikat, Jennette McCurdy. album ini dirilis pada 5 Juni 2012 vi...

 

 

Цивилизация Древнего мира • Северо-Восточная АфрикаДревний Египет Пирамида Хефрена и Большой Сфинкс в некрополе Инбу-хедж (др.-греч. Мемфис, совр. Гиза) Другие названия Та-кемет, Та-мери, Та-уи, Кеми  • экзотопонимы — Мицраим, Мудраия, Миср, Маср Время сер. 4 тыс. до н...

Munisipalitas Kuzma Občina KuzmaMunisipalitasLokasi di SloveniaNegara SloveniaLuas • Total22,9 km2 (88 sq mi)Populasi (2013) • Total1.584 • Kepadatan6,9/km2 (18/sq mi)Kode ISO 3166-2SI-056Situs webhttp://www.obcina-kuzma.si/ Munisipalitas Kuzma adalah salah satu dari 212 munisipalitas di Slovenia. Kode ISO 3166-2 munisipalitas ini adalah SI-056. Menurut sensus 2013, jumlah penduduk munisipalitas yang luasnya 22,9 kilometer per...

 

 

Ärgre dich, o Seele, nichtBWV 186a186Church cantata by J. S. BachThe Schlosskirche in WeimarOccasion Third Sunday of Advent (186a) Seventh Sunday after Trinity (186) Cantata text Salomo Franck anonymous Chorale by Ludwig Helmbold (186a) Es ist das Heil uns kommen her (186) Performed 13 December 1716 (1716-12-13): Weimar 11 July 1723 (1723-07-11): Leipzig Movementseleven in two parts; originally sixVocalSATB choir and soloInstrumental2 oboestaillebassoon2 violins...

 

 

Solasodine Names IUPAC name (22R,25R)-Spirosol-5α-en-3β-ol Systematic IUPAC name (2S,2′R,4aR,4bS,5′R,6aS,6bR,7S,9aS,10aS,10bS)-4a,5′,6a,7-Tetramethyl-1,2,3,4,4a,4b,5,6,6a,6b,7,9a,10,10a,10b,11-hexadecahydrospiro[naptho[2′,1′:4,5]indeno[2,1-b]furan-8,2′-piperidin]-2-ol Other names Purapuridine; Solancarpidine; Solanearpidine; Solanidine-S Identifiers CAS Number 126-17-0 Y 3D model (JSmol) Interactive image ChEBI CHEBI:9190 N ChEMBL ChEMBL514596 N ChemSpider 391288...

American news commentator and game show panelist (1906–1995) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: John Cameron Swayze – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message) John Cameron SwayzeNBC's Camel News Caravan in 1955Born(1906-04-04)April 4,...

 

 

Head of the Catholic Church from 314 to 335 St. Sylvester redirects here. For other uses, see Sylvester (disambiguation) and Saint-Sylvestre (disambiguation). Pope SaintSylvester IBishop of Rome14th-century head reliquary, ZadarChurchNicene ChurchPapacy began31 January 314Papacy ended31 December 335PredecessorMiltiadesSuccessorMarkPersonal detailsBorn285Asculam, Roman EmpireDied31 December 335 (aged 50)Rome, Roman Empire[1]SainthoodFeast day31 December (Catholic)2 January (Orthodox)22...

 

 

Сельское поселение России (МО 2-го уровня)Новотитаровское сельское поселение Флаг[d] Герб 45°14′09″ с. ш. 38°58′16″ в. д.HGЯO Страна  Россия Субъект РФ Краснодарский край Район Динской Включает 4 населённых пункта Адм. центр Новотитаровская Глава сельского пос�...

Annual music event in Gothenburg, Sweden Way Out WestGenreRock, alternative rock, electronic, hip hop, worldDatesSecond weekend in August (3 days)Location(s)Slottsskogen, Gothenburg, SwedenYears active2007–presentWebsitewww.wayoutwest.se/english Slottsskogen, Gothenburg, where the festival is held Way Out West is a three-day music festival held in Gothenburg, Sweden, during August that plays host to a variety of popular music artists mainly from the rock, electronic and hip-hop genres.[...

 

 

Coordinate: 43°42′N 24°29′E / 43.7°N 24.483333°E43.7; 24.483333 OescusTratto di mura della fortezza legionaria di Oescus.Periodo di attivitàfortezza legionaria dall'86 al V secolo Località modernaPleven in Bulgaria Unità presentiLegio V Macedonica da Augusto a Traiano;[1] Provincia romanaMesia superiore Status localitàcolonia romana a partire da Traiano Oescus era un'antica città della Moesia, a nord-ovest della moderna città bulgara di Pleven, vicino al ...

 

 

Commune and town in CameroonBabadjouCommune and townCountry CameroonTime zoneUTC+1 (WAT) A hut at Bandjoun palace Babadjou is a town and commune in Cameroon. See also Communes of Cameroon References Site de la primature - Élections municipales 2002 (in French) Contrôle de gestion et performance des services publics communaux des villes camerounaises - Thèse de Donation Avele, Université Montesquieu Bordeaux IV (in French) Charles Nanga, La réforme de l’administration territoriale ...

Place in Lower Carniola, SloveniaPrilipePrilipeLocation in SloveniaCoordinates: 45°52′38.8″N 15°37′25.05″E / 45.877444°N 15.6236250°E / 45.877444; 15.6236250Country SloveniaTraditional regionLower CarniolaStatistical regionLower SavaMunicipalityBrežiceArea • Total1.67 km2 (0.64 sq mi)Elevation177.1 m (581.0 ft)Population (2020) • Total86 • Density51/km2 (130/sq mi)[1] Prilipe (p...

 

 

عنت تقويم أمازيغيالمحافظة السامية للأمازيغيةشهر يناير فورار ماقو يونيو يوليو أغسطس شوتمبر توبر نوفمبر دوجمبر تقويم هجري تقويم ميلادي اللغات الأمازيغية

 

 

South Wind Knows adalah sebuah seri drama romansa televisi Tiongkok tahun 2023 yang dibintangi oleh Cheng Yi dan Zhang Yuxi. Seri tersebut tayang di Youku sejak tanggal 12 September 2023. Seri tersebut diadaptasi dari sebuah novel berjudul South Wind Knows My Mood (南风知我意) karya Qi Wei. Seri tersebut terdiri dari 39 episode dengan jangka waktu per episode sekitar 45 menit.[1] Sinopsis Kisah asmara timbul antara seorang ahli botani bernama Fu Yun Shen dan seorang dokter bernam...

У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Байда. В Википедии есть статьи о других людях с такой фамилией, см. Вишневецкий; Вишневецкий, Дмитрий. Дмитрий Иванович ВишневецкийДимитрій Вишневецкій Портрет XVIII века[1] князь староста Черкасский[2]и КаневскийВел�...

 

 

Questa voce sugli argomenti calciatori messicani e calciatori statunitensi è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Segui i suggerimenti dei progetti di riferimento 1, 2. Julián AraujoNazionalità Messico Altezza175 cm Calcio RuoloDifensore Squadra Las Palmas CarrieraGiovanili 201?-2018 LA Galaxy Squadre di club1 2019-2022 LA Galaxy102 (2)2023- Barcellona0 (0)2023-→  Las Palmas14 (1) Nazionale 2017 Stati Uniti U...

 

 

Keuskupan Beauvais, Noyon, dan SenlisDioecesis Bellovacensis, Noviomensis et SilvanectensisDiocèse de Beauvais, Noyon et SenlisKatolik Katedral Santo Petrus, BeauvaisLokasiNegaraPrancisWilayahOiseProvinsi gerejawiReimsStatistikLuas5.855 km2 (2.261 sq mi)Populasi- Total- Katolik(per 2015)801.512550,000 (perkiraan) (68.6%)Paroki45Imam115 (diosesan)24 (Ordo Relijius)25 Deakon PermanenInformasiDenominasiKatolik RomaRitusRitus LatinPendirianAbad ke-3KatedralKate...

スロバキア国内にて ウィーン盆地[1](ドイツ語: Wiener Becken、チェコ語: Vídeňská pánev、スロバキア語:Viedenská kotlina、スロベニア語:Dunajska kotlina)とは、アルプス山脈とカルパティア山脈の間に存在する堆積盆地である。 地形 ウィーン盆地の半分以上はオーストリアのニーダーエスターライヒ州に存在し、残りの領域は同国ウィーンとチェコ、スロバキアの両国家�...

 

 

我们能可以指: 我們能 (西班牙) 我们能 (巴西) 共同加泰罗尼亚—我们能 历史公约“哥伦比亚我们能” 我们能!—政治纲领(英语:We can! (Croatia)) 参见 名稱以「我们能」開頭的所有条目 名稱以「我們能」開頭的所有条目 这是一个消歧义页,羅列了有相同或相近的标题,但內容不同的条目。如果您是通过某條目的内部链接而转到本页,希望您能協助修正该處的内部链接,...