. . . "102.0"^^ . . "The factory was originally a General Motors' plant for building city transit buses intended for the Canadian market. In 1987 GM divested its entire bus holdings, selling them to Motor Coach Industries (MCI), itself formed from companies formerly owned by Greyhound Lines. The plant was used to produce the Classic model for sales in Canada, while GMC's RTS product was moved to join MCI's own designs at Transportation Manufacturing Corporation in Roswell, New Mexico."@en . . . "Plattsburgh, New York"@en . "NovaBus"@en . . . "Nova Bus is a bus manufacturing company based in Wikipedia:Saint-Eustache, Quebec, Canada. The company is now owned by Prevost, which is a division of Volvo Buses. Nova Bus was created by a reorganization of the transit bus division of MCI in 1993, and continued the production of the Classic model (which was started by General Motors Diesel Division Buses in late 1982) until MCI bought the transit division in 1987. The RTS model, originating from General Motors, was also acquired by NovaBus."@en . "Voith, Allison, or ZF"@en . . . . . "244.0"^^ . . "1993"^^ . "Saint-Eustache, Quebec, Canada"@en . . . . "1995"^^ . . . . . . "Subsidiary"@en . "us"@en . "Saint-Eustache, Quebec"@en . "Nova Bus LFS"@en . "Nova Bus"@en . "62.0"^^ . . "40.0"^^ . . . . "244"^^ . . "3"^^ . "The factory was originally a General Motors' plant for building city transit buses intended for the Canadian market. In 1987 GM divested its entire bus holdings, selling them to Motor Coach Industries (MCI), itself formed from companies formerly owned by Greyhound Lines. The plant was used to produce the Classic model for sales in Canada, while GMC's RTS product was moved to join MCI's own designs at Transportation Manufacturing Corporation in Roswell, New Mexico. MCI decided to divest itself of its urban rapid transit models in 1993, and Nova Bus was created to take over the Classic and RTS models at the Saint-Eustache and Roswell plants. Nova Bus is thus the spiritual descendant of the original GM lines. The Classic and RTS were later dropped in order to concentrate on the Nova LFS, a low-floor city bus, which was introduced in 1995. The last Classic model was produced in 1997. The Nova LFS proved to perform poorly compared to competitors in terms of sales, and Nova Bus closed their Roswell and Niskayuna, New York plants in 2002 to concentrate all effort on the Canadian market. The Roswell plant was later taken over by a local consortium, Millennium Transit Services, but this effort went bankrupt in 2008. Nova Bus now tends to focus on the Canadian market. However the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA), with several hundred LFS units in its active bus fleet, remains one of the larger Nova Bus operators. On [[February 2, 2008, Nova Bus announced plans for the construction of a new assembly plant in Plattsburgh, New York, signifying the company's return to the U.S. bus market. The plant opened for business on June 15, 2009. Its first US order under the American production was a order from the New York City Transit Authority for 90 LFS Articulated buses, which will be delivered in 2010."@en . "123.0"^^ . . . . "Nova Bus is a bus manufacturing company based in Wikipedia:Saint-Eustache, Quebec, Canada. The company is now owned by Prevost, which is a division of Volvo Buses. Nova Bus was created by a reorganization of the transit bus division of MCI in 1993, and continued the production of the Classic model (which was started by General Motors Diesel Division Buses in late 1982) until MCI bought the transit division in 1987. The RTS model, originating from General Motors, was also acquired by NovaBus. They currently produce a single product, the Nova LFS, a low-floor urban transit bus, which was introduced in 1995. The last Classic model was produced in 1997. After closing their American assembly plants in Wikipedia:Roswell, New Mexico, and Niskayuna, New York, in 2002, Nova Bus basically withdrew from the American bus market, instead primarily focusing on Canadian transit."@en . .