Getting there
National Express buses travel to York from major cities such as London (five hours), Birmingham (three hours) and Edinburgh (six hours). A score of competing regional bus companies service local hotspots like Scarborough, Whitby and Leeds. York has always been something of a rail hub - its station was the largest in the world when it opened back in 1877. Twenty-five trains a day stop in at York en route from London (two hours), and southern connections include Peterborough, Cambridge, Bristol and Oxford via Birmingham. York is a four-hour drive from London or Edinburgh (both approximately 322km/200mi). If you are determined to fly into York, the closest airports are Manchester (a two-hour drive) and Leeds (one hour).
Getting around
York's major sights are within a mere 20-minute walk of each other, but if you're footsore you can hop on a First York local bus and buy an off-peak day pass for under
The moors, on the other side of the Vale of…
Yorkshire, known to readers of Wuthering Heights and All Creatures…
21km (13 miles) NW of Scarborough Though Robin Hood's Bay…
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