Skip to main content

Amphibious bus may replace ferry

Leading international public transport group, Stagecoach, is undertaking trials of an amphibious bus - 'amfibus' - on the River Clyde near Glasgow in Scotland.
February 1, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Leading international public transport group, 805 Stagecoach, is undertaking trials of an amphibious bus - 'amfibus' - on the River Clyde near Glasgow in Scotland. The US$1 million bus, based on a 609 Volvo chassis, can carry 50 passengers and is built in Holland by 2054 Dutch Amphibious Transport Vehicles BV (DAT) of Nijmegen. Fitted with a Euro 5-compatible engine, it can travel at 8kt (14.8km/h) in the water and has a maximum road speed of 100km/h.

2050 Strathclyde Partnership for Transport operates the 500-year-old Renfrew to Yoker ferry service and concedes that it is a vital transport link, catering for 140,000 passenger journeys a year. Nevertheless, in January it decided to axe the ferry at the end of March to save nearly US$650,000 a year.

Plans to replace the ferry with the 'amfibus' will not just involve crossing the river between Renfrew and Yoker. Instead it will run by road from Braehead to the Renfrew Ferry slipway, cross the Clyde to Yoker, and then continue by road to Clydebank.

Brian Souter, Stagecoach Group Chief Executive, said: "This is an exciting transport project that would provide a seamless bus connection between two important local communities. Passengers can use the amfibus to travel over road and water without having to change from a bus to a ferry."

Souter says that the vehicle demonstrates the potential of rivers and estuaries to be links rather than barriers to travel.

Related Content

  • January 28, 2013
    Confidex to supply smart ticketing for Glasgow subway
    Finland-headquartered contactless fare media supplier Confidex is to supply Strathclyde Partnership for Transport (SPT) with contactless ITSO (the UK technical standard for interoperable smart ticketing) smart tickets to replace the magnetic stripe tickets currently in use across the Glasgow underground system. The tickets will be encoded and issued from vending machines, parking machines and ticket offices. SPT assistant chief executive Eric Stewart says: “A key part of SPT’s subway modernisation work is
  • January 25, 2012
    Flexible, cost efficient bus trailers adapt to passenger demand
    The cost, environmental and other benefits of the bus trailer concept are obvious. Used in several areas of Germany, as well as Austria, Switzerland, and Luxembourg, vehicle sizes can be adapted to passenger demand. The Ruebenacker group, a public transport provider in the Black Forest region of Germany, is one of more than 20 bus operators in the country that have deployed bus trailers, also referred to as bus trains. The company owns 81 buses and transports nearly six million passengers a year in the Blac
  • December 4, 2015
    Mayor sets out bold vision for 13 new river crossings for London
    A bold vision to transform cross-river travel in London has been unveiled by the Mayor of London. A total of 13 new tunnels and bridges have been proposed as part of the Mayor’s vision for the future of the Capital, increasing the total number of river crossings between Imperial Wharf and Dartford by more than a third, and the number for pedestrian and cyclists by nearly 50 per cent. The proposals, which would cater for both public transport and road users, are detailed in a new strategic plan that
  • July 4, 2024
    Unicard smart ticketing set for Scotland
    Solution will digitise Strathclyde Partnership for Transport’s ZoneCard ticketing