Also known as Minories bus station or lay-by, it was the first dedicated bus station in the City of London,[1] and was formerly a major coach station and trolleybus terminal.
Trolleybus terminal
The City of London Corporation prohibited trams and trolleybuses from entering the square mile - Aldgate was therefore used as a terminal on the edge of the city. Opened in the 1930s, by 1947 it was the busiest bus station in London with 1,358 departures a day.[2] Trolleybus services ceased in 1961.[2] In 1964 it was rebuilt as a bus and coach station.[3]
^Annual Report and Accounts - London Transport Board, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1964, p. 9, The Central Bus and Green Line coach station at Minories, Aldgate, was reconstructed, with new passenger and staff accommodation
^"Schedule 1 Part 1". Department for Transport: Transfer Scheme: BRB (Residuary) Limited to Network Rail Infrastructure Limited, London & Continental Railways Limited, Rail Safety and Standards Board Limited, and the Secretary of State for Transport. The Stationery Office. 8 October 2013. ISBN9780108512698.
^Title Number: NGL370014, HM Land Registry, 25 January 2020