What's the most remote bus stop on the TFL network? I reckon it's Pilgrims Way served by the 246, as the nearest bit of civilization is about 30 mins walk away.
Walkers and dogwalkers (or doggers for short.)Useful if you needed to visit Badger Bathrooms mind (or The Velo Barn)
That stop probably sees some use by walkers doing the North Downs Way
Only for the special running days (it is removed at other times)Isn't there a TfL-branded bus stop in the abandoned village of Imber on Salisbury Plain?
Only for the special running days (it is removed at other times)
The furthest measured from Charing Cross?I'm sure a listing of TfL bus stops, and their locations (co-ordinates) is available for download somehere, if someone wants to find it and play around with the data to come up with a definitive answer.
I think the furthest LPTB/LT (Country) buses regularly got was Royston (the Board was allowed 'restricted outward runnings' to there), where presumably there was an LPTB stop...
That is correct.True. Though isn’t the one at Warminster Station permanent?
I have a permanent stop for the London 160 route here in Penzance.That is correct.
A quick visual comparison off a (small scale) map. Other possible furthest looks to be Aylesbury (Tunbridge Wells, Horsham and West Wycombe are not quite as far methinks)... I will leave it those with more detailed knowledge of LT's country routes to come up with a more definitive answer...The furthest measured from Charing Cross?
There used to be a London Transport bus stop, together with old London RTL bus, at Long Beach, California next to the Queen Mary ship.But there's probably a bus museum in a far off country (New Zealand ?) which has put on up somewhere.
Found it: see https://tfl.gov.uk/corporate/transp.../foi-request-detail?referenceId=FOI-0950-2324 , or, for more options/discussion, https://techforum.tfl.gov.uk/t/complete-list-of-bus-stops/2358/26 .I'm sure a listing of TfL bus stops, and their locations (co-ordinates) is available for download somehere, if someone wants to find it and play around with the data to come up with a definitive answer.
Yes, you might well have done, I certainly did, and the route still exists but isn't a TfL one. The history of it is probably more complex than almost any other and, for once, the word unique fully deserves to be applied to it.Is this a TfL/ was this a LPTB bus route 84? Might I have taken it on a Red Rover ticket in the 1960s?
So is Westhumble StreetWesthumble Street on the 465 is certainly a contender. Although like Pilgrims Way on the 246 it is outside of the Greater London border.
Following the OP's link goes to a stop that isn't at the extremity of its route, so apparently the latter was intended. It's in open countryside north of Westerham, which is the route's destination.When you say "remote" do you mean remote (i.e. furthest) from London, or remote from anything else?