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Bus Depot Mall 1977 - 1979

The photographs in this series were taken c. 1977 – 1979 at the Bus Depot Mall on Portage Avenue and Balmoral Street, Winnipeg MB. At the time I worked close by and passed through the mall frequently. There were two bus lines operating out of the facility; Grey Goose and Greyhound. Grey Goose serviced all of the smaller communities and Greyhound ran between major centres.  Greyhound exited the Canadian market in 2021.

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Bus Depot mall, Portage Avenue, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Balmoral Street access, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Waiting area with lockers, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Waiting area and Snack Bar, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Waiting area and ticket counter, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Waiting area and Grey Goose ticket counter, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Departure/Arrival area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Boarding area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Waiting area and Greyhound ticket counter, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Arrival/Departure area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Arrival/Departure area with Medallion and Pong machines, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Portage Avenue entrance, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Loading/boarding area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Boarding/loading area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Custodian and Greyhound ticket counter, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Arrival/departure area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Loading/boarding area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Weight and fortune machine and lockers, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Arrival/departure area with Medallion machine, Pong game and Photo booth, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Lockers and Snack Bar, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Waiting area, Greyhound ticket counter and Gift shop (closed), Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Arrival/departure area, Grey Goose ticket counter and cafeteria, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Grey Goose ticket counter, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Grey Goose ticket counter, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Arrival/departure area with pay telephones, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Balmoral Street entrance, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Arrival/departure area and Grey Goose ticket counter, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Arrival/departure area with pay telephones, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Waiting area with lockers and arrival/departure times, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Grey Goose bus, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Loading/boarding area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Greyhound/goose bus, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Shipping office for Greyhound/Grey Goose bus lines, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Waiting area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Drivers at Grey Goose ticket counter, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

Loading/boarding area, Bus Depot mall, Winnipeg Mb

1977 - 1979

17 Responses

  1. Nice exhibit, Robert. Great candid street photography. I miss the kind of signage we see in some of the photos. There is something more human about it compared to today.

    1. Yes, can you imagine a machine that can tell you your weight and give you a fortune card… pretty exciting stuff.

  2. My brother and I were sent up to Swan River by bus every year at Spring Break to stay with my Grandmothe.
    This exhibit brings back many fond memories of the Winnipeg bus depot and of that time in my life when every experience seemed new and exciting.

    1. I heard someone call the camera a memory machine once… glad that some of these touched your memory. A Swan River connection… what was you GM’s name if you don’t mind me asking?

  3. My first year in Winnipeg (1980), we took the bus home to Swan River on long weekends, the bus was always full of friends from back home.. so much fun.
    Thanks Rob for posting..

    1. There used to be two buses running to SR every day. The daytime one (milk run) stopped at every little town and the overnight (red eye) only stopped at Dauphin, Neepawa …

  4. Lovely series, Rob! I was at UWinnipeg in 1989 and the view in the top photo was just about the same then, with The Bay and United Army Surplus, but sans the fantastic BUS sign. I only rode the bus once, up to Swan to see Mag and Ernie, with my bro. It was a memorable trip, as Suzanne’s comment so aptly captures. Your photos of the bus depot and of Swan River tug the heartstrings and jog some fond memories. Thanks so much for sharing.

  5. I’ve always loved black & white images! What great shots of the bus depot Rob! It was in the perfect place, not at the airport! Such a shame to have lost Greyhound and Grey Goose. In winter we felt safer taking the bus to Thompson than driving, especially in frigid temperatures. Many rural people are quite stranded now.

    1. Thank you, Jane… The best part about buses and trains is that, while they may take a bit longer, you spend less time travelling to and from airports/hotels … there is a northern bus service running, but they drop people off at the airport ? Too bad.

  6. I remember a charter service that some ski club would run between Winnipeg and McCreary MB (Mount Agassiz). It would leave either the Bus Depot or Grant Park Shopping Mall at 6:00 am and return by 7:00 pm 9 on winter weekends in the late 70’s and early 80’s. The weird thing that I remember about those trips is that there was a regular bus driver, and his name was Ken Arbuckle. Not sure why that stuck. These pictures just brought that all back to me. Thanks Rob.

  7. Memory machine: Around this time my brother and I (10 and 12 years old if I recall) were put on the bus with a lunch of sandwiches and a few dollars in our pockets and a word from my dad to the driver to look out for us. We sat in the front seat all the way to Calgary to work at our grandparents meat-packing and butcher plant for a few weeks in the summer. All went well. Can’t imagine that happening today!

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