London's icon
The next evolutionary step from the
RT, London's Routemaster became the last in the
line of London Transport's buses, designed and built in London
especially for London. First operated in service
on 8 February 1956, the Routemaster design has now achieved over 50
years' service to London, a truly staggering achievement.
Far ahead of its time and inspired by aircraft production
techniques, the aluminium-bodied Routemaster was revolutionary in
many ways, including its chassisless construction, automatic
transmission and independent suspension, yet was considered by some
to be already obsolete when introduced due to its open platform,
front-engined design. Oh well, we can't all be right all the
time, or we'd all be Prime Minister.
Limited numbers of country buses and Green Line coaches were
built, but the Routemaster was quintessentially a red bus, moving
the masses day in, day out. Seating 64, or 72 in the later
RML class, Routemasters started life replacing trolleybuses, moved
on to replacing RTs, then in some cases replacing buses that were
supposed to replace them. But
the economics of providing services to a reducing number of
passengers eventually led to Routemaster operation being
concentrated on busy central London routes.
Many were re-engined with modern low-emission engines and
refurbished internally to extend their lives. Once ubiquitous
in London, the last ten now in service on two central London
heritage routes are testament to British engineering. Had
London continued to control its destiny, the rear-engined
FRM would have taken over. But it was not
to be, and the rest is history.