Citylink Coach Services

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Citylink Coach Services Inc.
CityLink Bus logo.svg
Founded2008; 14 years ago (2008)
HeadquartersMcKinley Hill, Taguig
Service areaMetro Manila
Service typeCity Operation, Shuttle Service
Routes
Fleet20 buses (Hino, King Long, Higer, Daewoo)
OperatorCitylink Coach Services Inc. (operated under First Oceanic Property Management Inc.)

Citylink Coach Services Inc. is an intercity bus company in the Philippines operated under First Oceanic Property Management Inc., an affiliate company of Megaworld Corporation. It plies routes from Eastwood City, in Libis, Quezon City[1] to Newport City, in Villamor Air Base, Pasay via C-5 Road, making the first bus company to traverse along the said road. This company offers shuttle services only for those who are working to the companies operated under Megaworld Corporation.

Like Bonifacio Transport Corp., this bus company is also one of the authorized non-EDSA Metro Manila buses in the National Capital Region that traverses from one business district to another.

History[]

Citylink Coach Services Inc. was established through its investment of P100 million by the First Oceanic Property Management, Inc., an affiliate company of Megaworld Corporation. The route Eastwood City-Newport City via C-5 Road was approved by the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (Philippines), a government agency under Department of Transportation and Communications last March 6, 2008 and the company operates using five buses—1 Hino, 1 Higer, and 3 King Long units. Later, the buses were increased to 15 and were used as shuttle service when Citylink has been invested by First Oceanic to boost the need for the employees working in the companies under Megaworld Corporation, its subsidiaries, and many multinational companies occupying at the business districts like Eastwood City, Newport City, Bonifacio Global City, McKinley Hill, and Ayala Center.[2][3][4]

Fleet[]

Citylink utilizes Hino, King Long, Higer, and Daewoo units, preferably air-conditioned, totalling about 20 buses. Five of those first units were used for city operation, while the rest are used as shuttle services going to Ayala Center in Makati, McKinley Hill and Bonifacio Global City in Taguig, and Eastwood City in Libis, Quezon City.

Operations[]

Citylink, like PVP Liner (Ayala-Asturias route), follows the schedules of departures and arrivals. Both buses do not have trips on Sundays.[5]

From Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3 to Eastwood City, trips are from Monday to Saturday, 6AM - 8AM, and from Monday-Friday, 4PM - 7PM. Every Saturday, only one unit will have a departure time at 4PM.[6]

From Eastwood City to Ninoy Aquino International Airport Terminal 3, trips are from Monday to Saturday, 6AM - 9AM, and from Monday-Friday, 5PM - 7:30PM. Every Saturday, only one unit will have a departure time at 5PM.

Bus terminals[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Republic, Lafarge partners with CAC". www.philstar.com. Philippine Star. 14 March 2008.
  2. ^ "Megaworld affiliate to spend P100M for bus system at the Fort". metromailnews.net. Archived from the original on October 2, 2009.
  3. ^ "Megaworld to link projects via bus system". business.inquirer.net. Archived from the original on June 25, 2009.
  4. ^ McKinley Hill (25 November 2009). "A Worker's Haven". seeknomore.blogspot.com.
  5. ^ "To Eastwood and Back". frozenrage.blogspot.com. 30 March 2009.
  6. ^ "How to get to Manila Airport, NAIA Terminal 1,2,3,4: Map, Commute, Directions, Taxi Bus Fare". backpackingphilippines.com.
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