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Concourse level of Punggol MRT/LRT station, with escalators leading up to the LRT platform. The Punggol LRT is an automated guideway transit line in Singapore.The line, which initially opened on 29 January 2005, connects the residential districts and suburbs of Punggol to Punggol Digital District and Punggol Town Centre, which consist of Singapore Institute of Technology (SIT)’s campus and ...
Map of Singapore and line layouts are taken from OpenStreetMap contributors Cleanup and editing by Seloloving. ... Punggol Coast MRT station; Punggol MRT/LRT station;
Punggol MRT/LRT station is a Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) and Light Rail Transit (LRT) interchange station in Punggol, Singapore. It is an interchange station between the North East Line (NEL) and Punggol LRT (PGLRT), and the one of the two MRT stations located within Punggol planning area.
This is a route-map template for the Punggol LRT line, an automated guideway transit line in Singapore.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
English: A map of Singapore's Mass Rapid Transit ... Updated Thomson-East Coast Line: 07:46, 8 October 2022: 1,410 × 1,007 (59 KB) Aforl: TEL3 opening date announced
North East Line Extension TBD 10 December 2024; 29 days ago () 1.6 km Punggol - Punggol Coast NE17 - NE18 — 1 (100%) S$79 million [10] North East Line total — 21.6 km: HarbourFront - Punggol Coast NE1 - NE18 — — — 17 (100%) S$5.39 billion [note 2] 17 (100%) Circle Line: Stage 3 May 2003; 21 years ago ()
On 22 December 2015, the two-car trains entered service on the Sengkang LRT line, boosting capacity to 204 per trip as compared to 105 in a single car configuration. [29] As of 2017, two car trains have entered service on the Punggol LRT line. [18]
The Mass Rapid Transit system, locally known by the initialism MRT, is a rapid transit system in Singapore and the island country's principal mode of railway transportation. After two decades of planning the system commenced operations in November 1987 with an initial 6 km (3.7 mi) stretch consisting of five stations.