Saturday, 31 January 2026

Confusion At Cummer-Nodd (4)

How The Mighty Are Fallen

Above is an early picture of the town centre at Cumbernauld. On that dual carriageway tunnel sat the main bus stops, located in an uninviting and gloomy wind tunnel. 
At least that's how fbb found it in the 1970s. It still is - and it is a great joy (!) if your connecting journey involves a change of direction.
Later visits saw some improvement in ambience and lighting but still with hard seats. But the bus terminal may have been OK for buses but was never great for passengers.

By the 1990s the competitive insanity in Glasgow had subsided somewhat. The dominant operator for Cumbernauld was Kelvin Central, successor to Alexander Midland.
The new livery was red with "Network" as a brand. There were timetable booklets (remember them?) ...
... later supplanted by leaflets.
Some of the complexity would be recognised in the Great Britain Bus Timetable of just over 25 years ago.

The KCB Network network was shown in three tables. Route 36 was a very basic all stops service ...
... accompanied by an X5 ...
... which included peak hour X4 and X6 variants as per the leaflets above. 
To this eight buses an hour provision, was added 40s and 50s ....
... providing the "stopping" services via Seafar and Kildrum. The latter two routes ran round the large Abronhill loop every 7/8 minutes.

There is an interesting table on First's archive of out-of-date information undated to confuse people. From 2012 we have ...
You might think M is for buses via the M8/M80, but, in fact, the M is for Moodiesburn, instead of a chunk of Motorway.

But with such opulence of operation, it will be of interest to see what First Glasgow is runnimg today.

Another out-of-date PDF leaflet ...
... suggests that today's X3 might be only every 30 minutes.
There are some maps on-line, not up-to-date, which suggest that the only First Bus service to Cumbernauld is now the X3.
Other operators' routes are printed in grey. 

So First has seen its bus operation to the town reduced from 12 buses an hour in Kelvin Central days (later bought by First) to just 2 ...
... and branding has been, as ever, inconsistent.

A more up-to-date First X3 is this ...
... which might imply a bus every 20 minutes; ony it isn't; it is three buses an hour at crackpot intervals as created by the company's £4 million so-called AI software investment. Note also that First no longer runs beyond the town centre to serve Abronhill.
But we also know that Stagecoach arrived on the Cumbernauld run and currently operates a fifteen minute X25/X25A combo ...
... although fbb cannot discover when this started. It does provide a 15 minute headway to Abronhill, just half of what it was in KCB Network days.

What your frustrated blogger does know is that there used to be a Stagecoach 28 ...
... which is still evident on-line. 
It runs no more. So it's not just First that needs to do a bit of electronic tidying up!

What fbb also knows is that in 2016 Stagecoach opened a new depot in the town.
Impressive eh?

What the above news item does not say is that Stagecoach's new depot was First's old depot, vacated a while earlier!

So First sold their shed to a competitor enabling them to compete more efficiently?

Sounds crackpot to fbb!

To restore sanity, fbb checked with Traveline Scotland; which confirms that the ONLY services between Glasgow and the now old new town are First's erratic X3 ...
... and Stagecoach's stable X25 ...
... and it's partner, the X25A.
The 25A doesn't  serve the town centre.

So in approx 30 years, local buses between Glasgow and the magnificent underground bus station have fallen from twelve buses an hour to just five.

But now comes the shock horror news.

From April, Stagecoach will close its depot in Cumbernauld and cease operating the X25/X25A. It will also end its part in a block of Citylink routes, as explained by Route One magazine.
(Click on the graphic to enlarge)

Stagecoach goes on to say that this makes the depot not viable and, in turn, that spoils the already weak Cumbernauld business.
And First will take over.

Now, if Stagecoach thinks their route is really losing money, then why would First want to take it over with no reduction in service?

One possible reason is ...

The upstart company is aiming to expand its business in Glasgow by opening a new depot in the city. First may well worry about McGills or their Midland Bluebird company deciding to invade Cumbernauld.

As McGills is better at running buses than First, the incumbent is right to be defensive.

Whatever the reasons, it looks like more confusion at Cumbernauld.

  Next Variety blog : Sunday 1st February 

Friday, 30 January 2026

Confusion At Cummer-Nodd (3)

McGill's Magnificent Message

Historically, the company was Walter Alexander of Falkirk. It became Alexander Midland or just plain Midland.
On its western territory, which included depots to the north if Glasgow, this morphed into a more modern and simple logo.
But, over in the eastern lands of fair Caledonia, it was the same blue with more cream and Midland Bluebird as a fleet name.
The buses wore a blue bird as a logo adornment.
The companies were all nationalised as part of The Scottish Bus Group but even a ubiquitous Leyland National carried an azure avian appendage.
Once swallowed by the ever greedy First Bus, the birds was eaten up by the "F" logo (for "fowl"?) ...
... until corporate tedium overtook the richness of blue Midland bird. 
The colour did return for an outburst of local branding ...
... but the level of commitment to brands was always erratic.

Come the sale of the former Bluebird to McGills and the name was revived. Early examples were nominal ...
... but a better identity soon followed, albeit, sadly, with a different blue.
Our old friends X36 and X37 via Cumbernauld were route branded as "City Swift" which they undoubtedly were between 'greater' Cumbernauld and Glasgow.
The publicity leaflet for these routes offers McGill's Magnificent Message to its customers; although the "Swift' seems to have lost its 'City'.
For fbb, the highlight of the leaflet is the cartography. The full route map shoes the X36 from Stirling ...
... and the X37 from Falkirk in more than adequate detail ...
... followed by the joint route from Cumbernauld to Glasgow.
There is connections information (but only flor McGills routes! It wouldn't  do to be too helpful!) is shown at the three termini; Stirling ...
... with a local map.
We have Falkirk ...
... and map.
There are onward McGills McGills connections from Glasgow ...
... but, oddly, no map. Finding the buses listed above is far from fun!

But logos now include the 'City' and the "Swift".

Oh, yes, there is a well produced timetable.
BUT - no fares information. Why are bus companies so unwilling to tell you how much their product costs? Imagine going into a Glasgow chippy and asking "how much for a fish supper carryoot?"  ...
... and being politely advised,

"Nae bother, pal, I'll tell ye when it's in the poke."

It seems unlikely that such a retail establishment would continue trading for many weeks; assuming that the proprietor survived an element if consequential physical violence.

Tut, tut!

Tomorrow, Cumbernauld to Glasgow "locals" and a weird forthcoming development.

In the meantime a 'poke' is a bag, in which you might keep a pig.

And, the big question is whether it is a (Midland) Bluebird ...
... or a (City) Swift?
Not only buses but ornithology is covered by fbb's  blogs.

  Next Cumbernauld blog : Sat 31st Jan