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Bergen trolleybus

Bergen trolleybus system
Bergen trolleybus line 2.jpg
A Neoplan N6321 (also referred to as MAN-Neoplan Kiepe) trolleybus operated by Tide Buss on line 2.
Operation
Locale Bergen, Norway
Open 24 February 1950 (1950-02-24)
Routes 1
Owner(s) Skyss
Operator(s) Tide Buss
Statistics
Route length 7 km
Passengers 6,000
Overview
{|cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 style="background-color:transparent;text-align: left" align=center
Strandkaiterminalen
Strandgaten
Småstrandgaten
Gamle Rådhus
Nygaten
Kong Oscars gate
Kalvedalsveien
Årstadveien
Haukeland sykehus
Nattlandsveien
Depot
Birkelundstoppen
|}
Website ATM (Norwegian)

The Bergen trolleybus system serves the city of Bergen, Norway. It is the only trolleybus system still in operation in Norway and one of two trolleybus systems in Scandinavia.

It opened on February 24, 1950, as the Bergen Tramway was gradually closed and some of the tram lines were converted to trolleybus. It was built and operated by Bergen Sporvei, and is now operated by its successor, Tide Buss.

As of 2007, it had six trolleybuses and two dual-mode buses.

The first trolleybus network in Norway, in Drammen, opened in 1909. Planning for a trolleybus system began in Bergen in 1928, and in 1937 Bergen Sporvei, the company operating Bergen's tramway, began studying trolleybus systems around Europe. On July 7, 1940 the city council decided to build two trolleybus lines: Line 5, Mulen - city centre - Møhlenpris, and line 7, Nordnes - city centre - Fjøsangerveien. In 1942 Bergen Sporvei started converting some of its gasoline buses to trolleybuses, but in 1944 the German occupation forces took the completed bus and moved it to Lübeck, and the company stopped rebuilding.

The fuel shortage during World War II made trolleybuses extremely popular, since Norway had an abundance of cheap electricity. After the war the construction of the 4.1-km line 5 started, and in 1950 it replaced tram line 3. By that time, five gasoline buses had been converted, giving a headway of 10 minutes. A year later, three more buses were bought from Strømmens Værksted and the headway was reduced to 7.5 minutes. The line was popular, and traffic increased. In 1954 the conversion of tram line 2 to trolleybus started, and in 1957 the 6.5-km line 2 opened with 18 new buses. The ridership reached its peak in 1959 with more than ten million passengers per year on the two routes. In 1960 the sale of cars in Norway was deregulated, resulting in fewer public transport riders.


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Wikipedia

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