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Porto di Mare (literally Sea Port) is a station on Line 3 of the Milan Metro in Milan, Italy. The station was opened on 12 May 1991 as part of the extension of the line from Porta Romana to San Donato. [2] It takes the name from a never-realized project of a fluvial port to reach the Po River and consequentially the Adriatic Sea.
The current Metromare system runs on a 9.8 km (6.1 mi) long track entirely segregated from outside traffic and adjacent to the Bologna–Ancona railway.Almost 60 percent of the route has only a single bi-directional lane while the remainder has two lanes, but there are two sets of overhead trolley wires – one for each direction – along the entire line.
Milan Metro network map The logo. The Milan Metro is the rapid transit/metro system serving Milan, Italy. The network comprises 5 lines, identified by different numbers and colors, with a total route length of 112 kilometres (70 mi) and 125 stations. The system has a daily ridership of over one million. [1]
Milan Metro has a total length of 112 km (70 mi), serving 135 stations, making it the longest metro network in Italy. The system carries about 1.15 million passengers per day. The system carries about 1.15 million passengers per day.
The Milan Metro is the largest rapid transit system in Italy in terms of length, number of stations and ridership; and the fifth longest in the European Union and the eighth in the Europe. [ 3 ] The first line, Line 1 , opened in 1964; [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Line 2 opened 5 years later in 1969, [ 5 ] Line 3 in 1990, [ 5 ] Line 5 in 2013, [ 6 ] and Line 4 ...
Line 3 (Linea Tre in Italian, also known as M3) is an underground line in Milan, Italy. This line is part of the Milan Metro and operated by ATM. Construction began in 1981 in order to be ready for the 1990 Football World Cup. It is also called the Yellow Line (Linea Gialla) as identified by its yellow signage.
The two-bedroom house has an office, spacious dining room, balcony, front porch with a little garden, and another covered terrace area where the Tuminellos enjoy morning coffee.
The port of Marina is served by the hydrofoil's line MM6W Naples-Sorrento-Marina di Camerota, part of a local passenger ferry network named Metrò del Mare. [3] The village is also crossed by the national highway SS 267.