Thursday, 7 May 2026

Algeria 2026

 

Operating route 4 in Biskra is a Mercedes Benz.

The country.

Algeria is the largest country in Africa covering 2.4 million sq km with a population of 46.7 million: the capital is Algiers with a population of 3.1 million. Geographically, the Sahara Desert encompasses most of the country except for its fertile north, along the Mediterranean coast, where most Algerians live. The two distinct areas are divided by the Atlas Mountains that run west to east across the country from the Moroccan to Tunisian borders. The languages are Algerian Arabic and French, although English is now being taught as the second language in schools. The country is steeped in history which is reflected today in many Roman remains and more modern French influences. After the 1954-1962 War of Independence against the French and the 1991-2002 Civil War, the country is now stable with a thriving economy based upon gas and oil. 


Algiers, Mercedes‑Benz O345 with MCV body operated by Tahkout, a specialist in education transport. Mercedes Benz produced buses locally at its Rouiba plant. The bus is outside the Areej Library, part of the University of Algiers, having just come through the road tunnel under the university buildings and is taking a sharp bend on Rue Didouche Mourad. As is the case with most buses in Algeria, the destination box is not used and, in this instance, it contains a broom and black bin bag.

Transport.

There is an efficient passenger rail network along the Mediterranean coast, however going inland the rails are primarily for freight. There are eight tram systems in the country and the capital Algiers has a single line metro. Both the capital and the city of Constantine have cable car networks. 

Road passenger transport can be divided into three distinct types. Firstly, are small midibuses, typically Hyundai County built locally although there are many older types such as the SNVI 25L4 still plying their trade. They are used initially for local/medium distance services, later being down-graded to schools/transport social operations. It is this type of vehicle that caused recent headlines when in 2025 an overloaded bus crashed and killed 18 passengers, resulting in the government decreeing that all buses over 30 years old, approximately 5400 buses, would be banned immediately from the road and that 10,000 new buses (eg. under five years old) would be purchased. Eventually, a further 28,000 buses over 20 years old will be removed. In May 2026, it was reported that 3000 new buses are now on the road. 

The second type of vehicle is the standard city/urban bus, usually 11 or 12 meters in length, some with step entrances and other flat-floor. Older models consist of locally built Sonacome/SNVI types based upon the Berliet PR100 and manufactured between 1979 and 2002. Van Hool and Mercedes Benz are still well represented, however, the majority of more modern vehicles are Chinese imports, primarily from Higer. In line with current Government policy, banning importation of any new road vehicles and requiring manufacturing to be undertaken in the country, most recent new city type buses are from Tirsam based in Batna north-eastern Algeria. The current model is based upon the Chinese manufacturers Yutong and JMC products. Tirsam announced that it plans to begin local production of buses in Algeria during 2026. 

The third type of vehicles are coaches almost all being from Chinese manufacturers, again Higer being the dominant supplier, with many of these coaches proudly displaying roundels celebrating 20 years of Higer imports to the country. With very little tourist traffic the majority of the coaches are used on inter-wilaya (inter-state) services connecting major cities. The inter-wilaya network is extensive, providing a frequent and cheap means of travel, however, many of the coaches show signs of high mileage use. In total, there are 97,826 buses and coaches operating in Algeria.

Bus shelters are common place even in the remotest areas, essential in such hostile climatic conditions, but none of the shelters appeared to contain timetables nor did bus stops in larger towns and cities. Local people congregate at stops seemingly aware of the departure times although on occasions there appeared to be lengthy gaps in service. Online timetable and route information is limited for the visitor and many of the Algerian websites are blocked by security issues, although DZAIR.com does have a comprehensive list of all bus stops in Algiers along with maps and route planner. Passenger loadings are heavy on local and express services regardless of the time of day.


On the highway between Constantine and Algiers is a Daewoo BX212 operated by TVH. The windscreen destination sticker states the destination as Guelma, however, the vehicle is heading west towards Algiers suggesting the coach commenced its run in Guelma. Press reports indicated that Daewoo was to launch vehicle assembly in Algeria during 2025.

The journey.

Before setting out, it is worthwhile mentioning a couple of points about travel across Algeria in general. Road conditions very tremendously. Many roads consist of rough paving and potholes, although considerable amounts of money are being poured into upgrading the road infrastructure, much of it to motorway standard. Approaches to major road junctions and urban areas are supervised by local police or the Gendarmerie check points. Speed humps are used extensively throughout urban areas and at approaches to road junctions and check points, making journeys relatively slow.

Starting in Algiers, the capital city is located on the sweeping Bay of Algiers with a promenade several kilometres long, and the city centre is built on steep hillsides with narrow hairpin roads and many flights of pedestrian steps. Local bus services are managed by Urban and Suburban Transport Establishment of Algiers (ETUSA). As with many large cities, there are roadside terminus points although the city centre focal point for many services is the bus station at Gare de Champs de Manoeuvre just off the promenade. Some distance to the east is the express coach station, Gare Routiere Grandes Invalides Caroubier, in the commune of Hussein Dey and managed by The Société de Gestion des Gares Routières d'Algérie (SOGRAL). The bus fleet is an eclectic mix of Sonacome/SNVI, Mercedes Benz, Higer and Tirsam amongst others. This beautiful capital deserves a more indepth article which I hope will be published in a future blog.

440 kilometres to the east, after a visit to the ancient Roman city of Djemila, is Algeria’s third largest city, Constantine, known as the ‘City of Bridges’. Originally built on a high plateau surrounded by deep ravines, today it is a sprawling modern city that includes a lengthy single tram route. The bus and coach station is located at the bottom of the ravine close to the river near the Mellah Slimane Bridge. Other terminus points include the Palace of Justice/Novotel, Aouinet El Foul at the Place des Martyres roundabout and Rue Baraka close to the tram terminus. Smaller buses including SNVI 25L4 work several routes, whilst Sonacome/SNVI types work the narrow twisting road north towards Hamma Bouziane. Larger city buses include Van Hool A500’s and Tirsam T9’s. 


Circling the Place des Martyres in Constantine is a SNVI 25L4. The 25L4 was produced in large numbers during the 1990's and many are still in daily use. The bus is about to pull into a stop on Aouinet El Foul, to commence a service to the suburb of Boudraâ-Salah. Above the windscreen, the destination box says ‘God willing’ whilst the actual destination blind is the sticker on the lower windscreen.

Timgad lies 145 kilometres south of Constantine and is home to extensive Roman ruins, about 50 hectares, known as the Pompeii of Africa. The town itself is a small pleasant settlement. The local bus service is operated by H. Abidi using a Foton AUV coach. The town is also the starting point for an express service to Algiers operated by TVE (Transport Voyageurs Est) using 2015 built Van Hool T915 coaches.


Foton AUV (Beiqi Foton Motor Co., Ltd) operated by H. Abidi on local service in Timgad. The terminus for the service is a bus shelter just outside the entrance to the Roman city founded by the Emperor Trajan around 100 AD, known as the Pompeii of Africa.

The landscape changes as the road crosses the Atlas Mountains, still snow-capped despite the spring temperatures, and descends onto the Desert plain reaching the first major town, Biskra. A large university town with a population of 307,987 astride the Oued Sidi Zerzour waterway. There is an extensive bus network with a bus/coach station located on L'oued Boulevard Front de. The bus fleet comprises of King Long XMQ6110G and many Sonacome/SNVI’s.

375 kilometres south west of Timgad is the industrial town of Touggourt which was the starting point in 1922 of the first motorised crossing of the Sahara. A further 309 kilometres southwest is the oasis town of Ghardaïa in the M’Zab Valley. A UNESCO site, the town is the commercial hub for the five surrounding historic villages. The modern oasis bears no resemblance to the Hollywood films of old, is still dependent upon the water that the oasis provides and with palm trees all around, the atmosphere is now more urban town. There is a surprisingly large network of bus services focused on the town centre bus station at Rue Emir Abdelkader, including vehicles from Higer, Tata and Isuzu. I hope to provide a more in-depth report in a future blog.


Climbing out of Ghardaïa Higer KLQ6108GA on route 50.

It is a long 621 kilometre drive south across the arid yet beguiling desert landscape to the final destination, Timimoun a town set amongst the sands and high dunes of the Gourra region. The area is steeped in Berber history and old abandoned settlements, whilst the modern main town has some unique architecture. On Rue 1er Novembre, surprisingly for such a small town, it has quite a large, well-used, central bus station with two long rows of shelters: interesting to note, the metal work supporting the bus shelters has ‘Welcome to Timimoun’ etched into it in English. The bus services are operated E.T.U.A (Etablissement de Transport Urbain ADRAR) using SNVI City vehicles.  


E.T.U.A (Etablissement de Transport Urbain ADRAR) bus stands in Timimoun bus station on Rue 1er Novembre. The bus is a SNVI (Société Nationale des Véhicules Industriels) City model. Local services operate to Aougrout, Tinerkouk, and Charouine whilst long distance operators provide services to Adrar, Béchar, Ghardaïa, Algiers and Oran. 

Timimoun is 1200 kilometres south of the capital, deep in the Sahara, and is where the journey ends. Algeria is a fascinating country, steeped in history, with wonderful landscapes and welcoming people and, for those interested in public transport, a feast for the eyes. Shoukran to Rafik Cheraitia for making this trip happen.  


22294 in the ETUSA fleet is a Van Hool A500/2 operating in Constantine. The bus is heading away from the Place des Martyres on Ave Aouati Mostafa towards the southern part of the city.


One of the many new Tirsam TS9 buses currently being delivered to Constantine. The bus stands at the Palace of Justice/Novotel terminus. Two batches each consisting of 50 new buses with a capacity of 70 passengers, have been delivered and commenced service on Friday, March 20, 2026. 


Algerian built Sonacome/SNVI type based upon the Berliet PR100. Returning to Constantine along the narrow ravine road from Bekira, a suburb north of the city. This vehicle type was manufactured between 1979 and 2002.


Two Higer KLQ 6108G’s at the Kadri Brahim, Constantine terminus.


An Ankai A6 operated by Youcef Passenger Transport Company, located in Batna a small town between Constantine and Biskra.


A Van Hool T915 of EPE TVC (formerly SNTV). One of two standing at the bus terminus in Timgad in the late afternoon. The destination blind was showing Algiers, a journey of 420 kilometres.


Calling in for a top-up at the service station on the outskirts of Oumache whilst operating route 37 is a King Long XMQ6116GFB. Buses in the same livery were also noted operating in Biskra. Oumache is a small Saharan-edge town known for its date palm tree agriculture and quiet rural character, 326 km from Algiers and 204 km from Constantine.

Saturday, 4 April 2026

Vancouver 2025

The City of Vancouver is a coastal seaport on the mainland of British Columbia, Canada. Located on the western half of the Burrard Peninsula, Vancouver is bounded to the north by English Bay and the Burrard Inlet and to the south by the Fraser River, and covers an area of 44 square miles. On the western end of the city is the 400-hectare Stanley Park. The city population is 766,296, whilst the greater metro area has in excess of 3m. Much of the city centre is built on a gentle incline from the waterfront and features a mixture of heritage buildings and ultra-modern architecture. Coast Mountain Bus Company, an operating subsidiary of TransLink, provides bus and trolleybus services, operating 1550 conventional buses on 232 routes and 262 trolleybuses on 13 routes. There are thriving convention, visitor and cruise sectors which are catered for by several coach companies. 


Wilson’s Transportation Ltd of Victoria, Vancouver Island operate express services from various points in downtown Vancouver to Victoria on Vancouver Island using BC Ferries Connector name. The summer schedule has six daily departures and the winter schedule has four with a total end-to-end journey time of four hours. Photographed at the Vancouver Pacific Central Station terminus is fleet number C262, a Prevost H3-45, acquired from Pacific Coach Lines in 2019.  


Coast Mountain Bus Company 18381, Nova Bus LFS HEV, BAE HybriDrive HDS200.  104 buses of this type entered service between November 2018 and May 2019. Service 22 is a north-south route connecting South Vancouver and Downtown Vancouver every 15 minutes. The bus is photographed south bound on Burrard Street.


Universal Coach Line is based in Richmond, an area south of central Vancouver close to the international airport, and provide private hire, contract and tourist services. Prevost H3-45 new in 2015 wears a vinyl wrap for the free shuttle service to the Capilano Suspension Bridge Park, 9km from downtown. The free shuttle operates all year round with pick-ups at Canada Place on the water front and the Hyatt Regency Hotel in the city centre. On the day of our visit Universal were providing a multi-vehicle shuttle service from the Canada Place Convention Centre, hence the No.2 on the clipboard in the windscreen.


Epic Rides was founded in 2010 offering minivan services from the international airport. In 2025 they operated five Volvo powered Prevost H3-45 coaches from downtown to Whistler, a ski resort in the Blackcomb mountains 121 kilometers from Vancouver, up to six times a day, with a journey time of 1hr 45mins. The coach is making a left turn into the city centre terminus located on Melville Street adjacent to Burrard Skytrain Station and the Hyatt Regency hotel.


Vancouver receives around 800,000 cruise passengers and over 11m visitors a year. Westcoast Sightseeing have been providing sightseeing services in Vancouver since 1984. Currently in excess of fifty-one vehicles of various types are operated including Alexander Dennis Enviro 500 double-deckers. Fleet number 293 is an ElDorado Escort RE dating from 2001 and used primarily on hotel transfers to the main tour fleet. Big Bus branding is used for much of the operation and a booking kiosk is maintained at Canada Place on the waterfront. 


Coast Mountain Bus Company 21025, an NFI XDE60 delivered in 2021. The last of a batch of 25 delivered between March and June 2022. Operating route 2, a north-south route connecting Dunbar Loop and Downtown Vancouver via Kitsilano. It is a frequent 15 minutes service operating seven days a week. The bus is turning from Burrard Street into Pender Street.


West Vancouver Transit (Blue Bus), formerly West Vancouver Municipal Transit, is owned and operated by the District Municipality of West Vancouver under a contract with TransLink. The system started operating in 1912 and is one of the oldest continually operated municipal transit systems in North America. Fleet number 907 is one of nine Nova Bus LFS units built in 2009. Route 250 is an east-west route connecting Horseshoe Bay with Downtown Vancouverl. The bus is on West Georgia Street in downtown, approaching the end of the route. 


No visit to downtown Vancouver can ignore the extensive trolleybus network with 13 routes, 262 buses and over 370 kilometers of wires.  Coast Mountain Bus Company 2144, an NFI E40LF Škoda 19 ML 3550 K/4 dating from 2006 waits at the junction of Granville Street and West Hastings Street approaching the historic area of the city centre. Route 16 is an east-west route connecting 29th Avenue Station and the 63rd Avenue Loop at West 63rd Avenue & Granville Street, operating every 10 to 15 minutes.