4-New-Time Table & Route Mapx

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

4-New-Time Table & Route Mapx GIBRALTAR BUS COMPANY LTD NIGHT BUS SERVICE Departing from Schedules ROUTE N8A (Circular) BLACK STRAP COVE: SCHEDULES BLACK STRAP COVE TERMINUS CALETA HOTEL REQUEST 21:15 hrs Normal Service: Summer Nights: Gibraltar Fair Week: WILLIAM’S WAY REQUEST 22:15 hrs CATALAN BAY STOP 23:15 hrs Fridays and Saturdays As announced As announced EASTERN BEACH STOP 00:15 hrs ST.THERESA'S CHURCH North STOP 01:15 hrs Last Trip PARK & RIDE REQUEST REFERENDUM HOUSE STOP CONSTITUTION HOUSE REQUEST OCEAN VILLAGE STOP ALBERT RISSO HOUSE STOP GASA SWIMMING POOL STOP ST. BERNARD'S HOSPITAL STOP EUROPORT BUILDING 8 REQUEST MID HARBOURS STOP KINGS WHARF STOP QUEENSWAY QUAY West REQUEST ELIOTT'S WAY REQUEST ROCK HOTEL REQUEST OLD CASINO REQUEST NatWest SHORTHORN FARM REQUEST SCHOMBERG REQUEST House ST. JOSEPH'S SCHOOL STOP NEW MOLE HOUSE REQUEST CUMBERLAND ROAD STOP JUMPER'S BUILDING REQUEST VICTORIA HOUSE REQUEST TRAFALGAR CEMETERY STOP CONVENT PLACE REQUEST NATWEST BANK STOP FISH MARKET STEPS Orange Bastion REQUEST NOTRE DAME STOP FAULKNOR HOUSE REQUEST ST. THERESA'S CHURCH REQUEST EASTERN BEACH REQUEST WILLIAM’S WAY REQUEST BLACK STRAP COVE TERMINUS Departing from OCEAN VILLAGE: SCHEDULES 21:00 hrs Normal Service: Summer Nights: Gibraltar Fair Week: 22:00 hrs 23:00 hrs Fridays and Saturdays As announced As announced 00:01 hrs 01:00 hrs Last Trip ROUTE N8B (Circular) OCEAN VILLAGE TERMINUS ALBERT RISSO HOUSE STOP GASA SWIMMING POOL STOP ST. BERNARD’S HOSPITAL STOP EUROPORT BUILDING 8 REQUEST MID HARBOURS STOP KINGS WHARF STOP QUEENSWAY QUAY (West) REQUEST ELIOTT’S WAY REQUEST ROCK HOTEL REQUEST OLD CASINO REQUEST SHORTHORN FARM REQUEST BRYMPTON REQUEST GARRISON GYM (West) REQUEST NatWest OCEAN VIEW (North Gorge) REQUEST House BUENA VISTA (West) REQUEST ELIOTT’S BATTERY REQUEST MOSQUE STOP EUROPA POINT STOP BUENA VISTA (East) REQUEST NORTH GORGE REQUEST GARRISON GYM (East) REQUEST MOUNT PLEASANT REQUEST SHORTHORN ESTATE (East) STOP TRAFALGAR CEMETERY (Top) STOP QUEENSWAY QUAY (East) REQUEST COMMONWEALTH PARK REQUEST OCEAN VILLAGE (Via Queensway) TERMINUS.
Recommended publications
  • Excursion from Puerto Banús to Gibraltar by Jet
    EXCURSION FROM PUERTO BANÚS TO GIBRALTAR BY JET SKI EXCURSION FROM PUERTO BANÚS TO GIBRALTAR Marbella Jet Center is pleased to present you an exciting excursion to discover Gibraltar. We propose a guided historical tour on a jet ski, along the historic and picturesque coast of Gibraltar, aimed at any jet ski lover interested in visiting Gibraltar. ENVIRONMENT Those who love jet skis who want to get away from the traffic or prefer an educational and stimulating experience can now enjoy a guided tour of the Gibraltar Coast, as is common in many Caribbean destinations. Historic, unspoiled and unadorned, what better way to see Gibraltar's mighty coastline than on a jet ski. YOUR EXPERIENCE When you arrive in Gibraltar, you will be taken to a meeting point in “Marina Bay” and after that you will be accompanied to the area where a briefing will take place in which you will be explained the safety rules to follow. GIBRALTAR Start & Finish at Marina Bay Snorkelling Rosia Bay Governor’s Beach & Gorham’s Cave Light House & Southern Defenses GIBRALTAR HISTORICAL PLACES DURING THE 2-HOUR TOUR BY JET SKI GIBRALTAR HISTORICAL PLACES DURING THE 2-HOUR TOUR BY JET SKI After the safety brief: Later peoples, notably the Moors and the Spanish, also established settlements on Bay of Gibraltar the shoreline during the Middle Ages and early modern period, including the Heading out to the center of the bay, tourists may have a chance to heavily fortified and highly strategic port at Gibraltar, which fell to England in spot the local pods of dolphins; they can also have a group photograph 1704.
    [Show full text]
  • THE DEVELOPMENT and PLANNING COMMISSION AGENDA Agenda for the 1St Meeting of 2016 to Be Held at the Charles Hunt Room, John Mack
    THE DEVELOPMENT AND PLANNING COMMISSION AGENDA Agenda for the 1st meeting of 2016 to be held at The Charles Hunt Room, John Mackintosh Hall on 27th January 2016 at 9.30am Mr P Origo (Chairman) (Town Planner) The Hon Dr J Garcia (Deputy Chief Minister) The Hon Dr J Cortes (Minister for Environment & Health) Mr H Montado (Chief Technical Officer) Mr G Matto (Technical Services Department) Mrs C Montado (Gibraltar Heritage Trust) Mr J Collado (Land Property Services) Dr K Bensusan (Gibraltar Ornithological & Natural History Society) Mr C Viagas Mr P Naughton-Rumbo (Deputy Town Planner) Mrs J Howitt (Environmental Safety Group) Mr J Mason (Rep Commander British Forces, Gibraltar) Mrs M Brittenden (Minute Secretary) 1st Meeting – 27/01/16 Page 1 of 6 Approval of Minutes of the 12th meeting held on 11th December 2015 Matters Arising 1. BA13576 Rosia Bay Glen Rocky Distillery waterfall -- Rock re-profiling for Glen Rock Distillery waterfall. Major Developments 2. BA12850 Rosia Bay -- Redevelopment of Rosia Bay for leisure and Outline residential use. Application and Environmental Statement Applicant and Objectors to address Commission 3. F/13847/15 23 John Mackintosh Square – Construction of a two storey extension and refurbishment of existing building including the recladding of the building, the construction of a commercial area at ground floor and offices at upper levels and the provision of a connection to the existing Gibtelecom building through an atrium. Follows on from grant of outline permission 4. REF 1281/50 LNG Power Station Storage Report on EIA Scoping Opinion only Other Developments 5. BA13765 51 Flat Bastion Road -- Proposed external passenger lift to be provided to building.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Guide
    #VISITGIBRALTAR GIBRALTAR WHAT TO SEE & DO ST MICHAEL’S CAVE & LOWER ST THE WINDSOR BRIDGE MICHAEL’S CAVE This tourist attraction is definitely not This beautiful natural grotto was prepared as for the faint-hearted, but more intrepid a hospital during WWII; today it is a unique residents and visitors can visit the new auditorium. There is also a lower segment that suspension bridge at Royal Anglian Way. provides the most adventurous visitor with an This spectacular feat of engineering is experience never to be forgotten, however, 71metres in length, across a 50-metre-deep these tours need to be pre-arranged. gorge. Gibraltar Nature Reserve, Upper Rock Nature Reserve, Gibraltar APES’ DEN WORLD WAR II TUNNELS One of Gibraltar’s most important tourist During WWII an attack on Gibraltar was attractions, the Barbary Macaques are imminent. The answer was to construct a actually tailless monkeys. We recommend massive network of tunnels in order to build that you do not carry any visible signs of food a fortress inside a fortress. or touch these animals as they may bite. GREAT SIEGE TUNNELS 9.2” GUN, O’HARA’S BATTERY The Great Siege Tunnels are an impressive Located at the highest point of the Rock, defence system devised by military engineers. O’Hara’s Battery houses a 9.2” gun with Excavated during the Great Siege of 1779-83, original WWII material on display and a film these tunnels were hewn into the rock with from 1947 is also on show. the aid of the simplest of tools and gunpowder. Gibraltar Nature Reserve, Upper Rock Nature Reserve, Gibraltar THE SKYWALK THE MOORISH CASTLE Standing 340 metres directly above sea level, The superbly conserved Moorish Castle is the Skywalk is located higher than the tallest part of the architectural legacy of Gibraltar’s point of The Shard in London.
    [Show full text]
  • Gibraltar Nature Reserve Management Plan
    Gibraltar Nature Reserve Management Plan Contents Introduction…………………………………………………...3 Management structure………….…………………………9 Upper Rock………….………………………………………..10 Northern Defences…………….…………………………..27 Great Eastside Sand Slopes……...……………………..35 Talus Slope…………….………………................................41 Mount Gardens.……………………………………………..45 Jacob’s ladder………….…………………………………….48 Windmill Hill Flats…………………………………………51 Europa Point Foreshore…………….…………………...56 Gibraltar’s Caves...………..………………………………...62 This document should be cited as: Thematic trails and general improvements….…..66 Gibraltar Nature Reserve Management Plan. Scientific Research and Monitoring....………………85 2019. Department of the Environment, Heritage and Climate Change. H.M. Management Plan Summary…………..….……………86 Government of Gibraltar. References……………………………………………………..88 Front cover: South view towards the Strait from Rock Gun, Upper rock Above: View of the Mediterranean Sea from the Middle Ridge, Upper Rock Back Cover: Jacob’s Ladder 2 Introduction Gibraltar is an Overseas Territory of the United Kingdom situated at the entrance to the Mediterranean, overlooking the Strait of Gibraltar. Its strategic location and prominence have attracted the attention of many civilisations, past and present, giving rise to the rich history and popularity of ‘The Rock’. In addition to its geographical importance, Gibraltar is just as impressive from a naturalist’s perspective. It boasts many terrestrial and marine species, most of which are protected under the Nature Protection Act 1991, Gibraltar’s pioneering nature conservation legislation. Gibraltar’s climate is Mediterranean, with mild, sometimes wet winters and warm, dry summers. Its terrain includes a narrow coastal lowland to the west, bordering the 426 metre high Rock of Gibraltar. With a terrestrial area of 6.53 km2 and territorial waters extending up to three nautical miles to the east and south and up to the median line in the Bay of Gibraltar, it is of no surprise that Gibraltar’s biological resources are inevitably limited.
    [Show full text]
  • Pinkerton A, Benwell MC. Heritage, Strategic Narratives, and the Making of Geopolitical Pasts, Presents and Futures at Europa Point, Gibraltar
    Pinkerton A, Benwell MC. Heritage, strategic narratives, and the making of geopolitical pasts, presents and futures at Europa Point, Gibraltar. Political Geography (2018) DOI link https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2017.12.006 ePrints link http://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/245736 Date deposited 20/02/2018 Embargo release date 13/02/2020 Copyright © 2018. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license Licence This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International licence Newcastle University ePrints | eprint.ncl.ac.uk Heritage, strategic narratives, and the making of geopolitical pasts, presents and futures at Europa Point, Gibraltar. Alasdair Pinkerton (Royal Holloway, University of London) Matthew C. Benwell (Newcastle University) In June 2016, the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union. Perhaps the most memorable result was the first to be declared – not only because of the enormity of the consensus expressed, but also because, somewhat counter intuitively, the result came from outside the United Kingdom altogether. Voters in the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar—a rocky Mediterranean promontory, ceded to Great Britain by Spain in 1713— expressed an overwhelming 96% support for remaining within the European Union; the single largest majority of any of the returning areas in the EU referendum (Garcia, 2016). The Gibraltar result was a direct reflection of the critical importance of the EU for the lives, livelihoods and future prosperity of Gibraltar’s
    [Show full text]
  • Presentation Uni Gibraltar
    Where is Gibraltar? • Gibraltar is a British Overseas Territory • Located on the southern end of the Iberian Peninsula at the entrance to the Mediterranean • It has an area of 2.6 square miles (6.7 km2) • Population: 32,000 • GDP: £1.91Bn (2016/17) The University • The University of Gibraltar opened its doors on 21st September 2015. • There are three faculties • Faculty of Business • Faculty of Health and Sport Science • Faculty of Tourism and Hospitality • Three Institutes: • Institute for Gibraltar and Mediterranean Studies • Institute for Earth and Life Sciences • Institute of Continuing Professional Development • Linked to the UK as a Member State of the EU, Gibraltar has access to European FundinG and the Erasmus+ ProGramme. • Gibraltar does not come under the UK universities but we chose to be aliGned with the UK Governance, Academic Framework and Quality Assurance. • The University of Gibraltar has Research DeGree and Research DeGree awardinG powers. Key Areas Our Campus Current Research Contribution 55% Income - Research Research Funding PhD Programme Attained: € • Climate ChanGe, Carbon Chemistry and Marine Submitted: € 1.5m 900,000 Science (3) • MarCons Cost - • MIRAGE InterreG - • Alzheimer's and social care research (2). €130,000 €97,000 • Influence of diGital technoloGy in classrooms • ClimACT - • SEAPPORTUNITY- €90,000 €75,000 • What is Llanito literature - defining Gibraltar culture and identity throuGh literary work. • Erasmus+ - • BONN - Biodiversity €80,000 MonitorinG - SUDEO • Gibraltar’s water industry –orGanisational chanGe €80,000 • UE4SD - • Professional child protection practices. €400,000 • BIOGLASER - InterreG - SUDOE €82,000 • BiG Data, remittances and its ability to predict social and natural disasters in EDCs • Marie Curie - €220,000 International Recruitment Target Countries: Priority A: Gibraltar, the UK, Australia, the USA, Spain, Morocco, China (incl.
    [Show full text]
  • Gibraltar Coincides with Channel Marmite at 5’S TV Show You Should Have Gone to Specsavers, Morrisons Writes Belinda Beckett
    www.theolivepress.es the olive press - February 5 - February 19 201419 1 ll about ibraltar AVol. 8 Issue 180 www.theolivepress.esG February 5 - February 19 2014 More than Britain in the Sun? You’re off your Rock-er... If your view of Gibraltar coincides with Channel Marmite at 5’s TV show you should have gone to Specsavers, Morrisons writes Belinda Beckett N 1987, Agent 007 parachuted onto the Rock in the open- ing sequence to The Living Daylights and, after dispatching a would-be assassin, sailed off in his yacht for more exotic climes. IIn those days, Gibraltar was not the kind of place to leave James Bond shaken or stirred. Fast-forward a quarter of a century and it’s a different story: Bond could have berthed his giga-yacht in swanky Ocean Village and strolled over to the casino for one of his trademark Martinis. After decades as ‘Little Britain in the Sun’, complete with old-school Tardis police boxes and Bobbies on the beat, Gibraltar has been forging a shiny new ID that is decidedly con- tinental – no thanks to Channel 5’s similarly- titled Tuesday night show, now on its second Turn to page 20 Photography by David Cussen 2 the olive press - February 5 - February 19 2014 www.theolivepress.es www.theolivepress.es the olive press - February 5 - February 19 20143 3 ll about ll about A Gibraltar A Gibraltar From Page 19 The continuing sovereignty dispute has seen Guinness World Record traffic queues at the border and the return of virtual series, which is doing a brilliant job resurrecting the Rule Brit- siege conditions – and over the centuries the Gibraltarians tania and fish ‘n’ chips image (ED: Thank heavens most of us have survived 14 of those.
    [Show full text]
  • The Case of Gibraltar
    Event Report: Brexit and Citizens' Rights: The Case of Gibraltar University of Gibraltar, Europa Point Campus – 25 April 2017 As a special British overseas territory sharing a land border with an EU country, Gibraltar’s economy and people are expected to suffer significantly from Brexit, in spite of the fact that its population of 32,000 inhabitants voted overwhelmingly to stay in the EU in the UK’s referendum. With 12,000 European citizens crossing the border from Spain every day to work in Gibraltar, preserving a free flowing border post-Brexit with its neighbour Spain will be of utmost importance for Gibraltar’s economy, which is greatly dependent on the cross-border workers who hold 40% of total jobs on the Rock. A free flowing border is also crucial for the tourist sector as the majority of the 10 million tourists who visit Gibraltar every year reach the Rock by land. Finally, a fluid border will be equally important for the economy of Andalucía since Gibraltar is the second largest employer for the whole Spanish region. The status of Gibraltar’s airport and its access to the EU single airspace will also be an important issue in the withdrawal agreement, as will the participation of Gibraltar in the future trade agreements that the UK will strike with third countries. These are some of the issues that were addressed during our conference in Gibraltar on 25 April 2017. The conference, organised by the European Citizen Action Service (ECAS) and Citizens Advice International (CAI), with the support of the Government of Gibraltar and Hassans International Law Firm, took place at the University of Gibraltar and was attended by 120 participants.
    [Show full text]
  • DEPARTMENT of EDUCATION and TRAINING BLEAK HOUSE TRAINING INSTITUTE Europa Point Gibraltar
    GOVERNMENT OF GIBRALTAR DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION AND TRAINING BLEAK HOUSE TRAINING INSTITUTE Europa Point Gibraltar DIRECTIONS Bleak House is situated at Europa Point, at the southernmost tip of Gibraltar. By Bus Number 2 bus route. Leaves the Market Place terminus every 15 minutes with stops at Glacis Kiosk, Line Wall Road and Europa Road. Bus stop is located at the top of Bleak House Road outside Trafalgar Heights apartment block. By Car The frontier is situated at the northern end of Gibraltar. After crossing the runway, turn left at the roundabout towards Catalan Bay. This brings you to the east side of the Rock. Continue along past the Caleta Hotel and the Both Worlds Complex. The road then enters a tunnel which leads to the Europa Point area. Go straight across the next roundabout at the Mosque and then take the next left turn (approx. 200m from roundabout). Bear right after approx. 50 metres. Bleak House is the building down the road on the left. There is a car park just beyond the building. Alternatively you can travel through the town area, following signs for the Lighthouse at Europa Point. This will take you up Europa Road and past the Rock Hotel. Continue on this road for approximately 2 kilometres until you reach St. Bernard’s Church on your left. Take the next turning on the right and bear right after approximately 50 metres. Bleak House is the building down the road on the left. There is a car park just beyond the building. ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Telephone: (350) 200 44445; Fax: (350) 200 43083 .
    [Show full text]
  • Lighthouses on World Paper Money
    LIGHTHOUSES ON WORLD PAPER MONEY By Miguel Chirinos IBNS #5992; NC-IBNS #3; LANSA #1252, ANA; NCNA Lighthouses on World Paper Money by Miguel Chirinos for NC-IBNS INTRODUCTION For several years I have had the wonderful opportunity to visit the coast of North Carolina where there is one of the most famous landmarks in America. It is located north of Cape Hatteras Point on the Outer Banks and near the site of the 1585 “Lost Colony” of Roanoke, which mysteriously disappeared in this beautiful natural area. On the Outer Banks, the coast changes ominously. North Carolina’s treacherous shore in the Cape Hatteras region has been called the “Graveyard of the Atlantic”. Long, thin barrier reefs run out to a point at Cape Hatteras, then turn sharply southwest to Cape Lookout. Farther south the entrance to Wilmington is marked by surf crashing on the menacing rocks of Cape Fear, a place where hurricanes strikes with savage force. The need for lighthouses became more apparent during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, after the voyages made by Columbus, Magellan and others. The great distances covered by European vessels were essentially unguided as they sailed into unknown waters. I can imagine these pioneers, turning back one last time before embarking on these great voyages, then thinking of the vast expanse of ocean, the countries and peoples they were to leave behind. The consequences of these long journeys, made by water with little navigation aids was extremely dangerous work. Lighthouses were far 1 Lighthouses on World Paper Money by Miguel Chirinos for NC-IBNS apart, there were no public buoys to guide the mariner, and almost nothing had been done to improve navigation.
    [Show full text]
  • Environmental Conditions and Geomorphologic Changes During the Middle–Upper Paleolithic in the Southern Iberian Peninsula
    Geomorphology 180–181 (2013) 205–216 Contents lists available at SciVerse ScienceDirect Geomorphology journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/geomorph Environmental conditions and geomorphologic changes during the Middle–Upper Paleolithic in the southern Iberian Peninsula Francisco J. Jiménez-Espejo a,b, Joaquín Rodríguez-Vidal c, Clive Finlayson d,e, Francisca Martínez-Ruiz a, José S. Carrión f, Antonio García-Alix a,⁎, Adina Paytan g, Francisco Giles Pacheco d, Darren A. Fa d, Geraldine Finlayson d, Miguel Cortés-Sánchez h, Marta Rodrigo Gámiz a, José M. González-Donoso i, M. Dolores Linares i, Luis M. Cáceres c, Santiago Fernández f, Koichi Iijima b, Aranzazu Martínez Aguirre j a Instituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la Tierra, CSIC-UGR, 18100 Armilla, Spain b Institute of Biogeosciences, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, Yokosuka 237-0061, Japan c Departamento de Geodinámica y Paleontología, Universidad de Huelva, 21071 Huelva, Spain d The Gibraltar Museum, 18-20 Bomb House Lane, Gibraltar, UK e Department of Social Sciences, Univ. of Toronto at Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M1C 1A4 f Department of Plant Biology, Universidad de Murcia, 30100 Murcia, Spain g Earth & Planetary Sciences Department, University of Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA h Departamento Prehistoria y Arqueología, Universidad de Sevilla, 41004 Sevilla, Spain i Departamento de Geología, Universidad de Málaga, 29071 Málaga, Spain j Departamento de Física Aplicada I, EUITA, Universidad de Sevilla, 41013 Sevilla, Spain article info abstract Article history: This study utilizes geomorphology, marine sediment data, environmental reconstructions and the Gorham's Received 19 December 2011 Cave occupational record during the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition to illustrate the impacts of climate Received in revised form 13 September 2012 changes on human population dynamics in the Western Mediterranean.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter 2
    31.12.2011 EUBORDERREGIONS NEWSLETTER 2 New Year’s Message from EUBORDERREGIONS If 2011 is anything to go by, 2012 promises to be a tumultuous year in economic, political and social terms. Much of our attention will be directed towards Europe and the troubles of the Eurozone, but the shifts that are taking place are obviously of international importance and touch all corners of the globe. Traditional politics “as usual” might not be enough to guide us through the creative, complex but often frightening unruliness that is our contem- porary world. Part of the raison d’etre of EUBORDERREGIONS is the proposition that co- operation, dialogue and openness are still our main resources for social and economic devel- opment and dealing with the challenges of diversity. During 2012, this project will explore the potentials of local development strategies based on economic, social and political networking beyond the EU’s formidable external frontiers. Although somewhat drowned out by politi- cal messages of fear and controlled borders, local diplomacy has a long and important history of creating inter- cultural dialogue. We here at EUBORDERREGIONS hope for a productive and progressive 2012, both in more in more global terms as well as for all of us individually. Stay tuned to this website for up-to-date information from fascinating borderlands “on the edge” of our greater regional Neighbourhood! Yours, James Scott EUBORDERREGIONS II Workshop was held in INSIDE THE NEWSLETTER: V i e n n a Status of the project, WP activities The EUBORDERREGIONS Workshop 2 was held in Vienna (Austria) overview (Pages 2-3) on October 21-22, 2011, attended by the representatives of all 14 partner organisations.
    [Show full text]