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  2. Schiphol–Antwerp high-speed railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schiphol–Antwerp_high...

    The Schiphol–Antwerp high-speed railway is a high-speed rail line connecting Schiphol Airport railway station, 9 kilometres southwest of the centre of Amsterdam, Netherlands, to Antwerp, Belgium. It has a total length of 147 kilometres (91 miles), crossing the Dutch/Belgian border at Hazeldonk/Meer .

  3. Public transport in the Netherlands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_transport_in_the...

    Rural bus services have typically hourly or half-hourly frequencies, but if a bus line serves multiple important hubs or towns, frequencies can be much higher. In larger cities the frequencies are mostly 4x per hour or more. Line 12 in Utrecht was the busiest bus line in the Netherlands, with up to 30 departures per hour using bi-articulated buses.

  4. Transport in Amsterdam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Amsterdam

    Public transport in Amsterdam consists of metro, tram, bus and ferry routes operated mainly by GVB, the city-owned public transport operator. Regional buses, and some suburban buses, are operated by Connexxion and EBS. Currently, there are 16 different tram routes, and five metro routes. There are also privately operated water taxis, a water ...

  5. High-speed rail in Belgium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-speed_rail_in_Belgium

    Some services also stop at Liège and Antwerp stations. However, these international operators are not allowed to sell tickets between two Belgian cities. Instead, passengers must take a Belgian IC train which uses the same high-speed lines [citation needed]. Eurostar connects Brussels to Amsterdam, Cologne (Köln), Düsseldorf, London, Paris ...

  6. De Lijn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Lijn

    De Lijn tram in Ghent. Vlaamse Vervoersmaatschappij De Lijn [1] (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈvlaːmsə vərˈvuːrsmaːtsxɑˌpɛi də ˈlɛin], English: "Flemish transport company 'The Line ' "), more commonly known as De Lijn, is a state-owned enterprise run by the Flemish government in Belgium to provide public transportation with about 2240 buses and 399 trams.

  7. Busstation Elandsgracht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Busstation_Elandsgracht

    Busstation Elandsgracht in Amsterdam is located under the car parking garage on Marnixstraat. The Elandsgracht bus station is a bus station for regional transport, on the corner of Marnixstraat and Elandsgracht on the western side of the center of Amsterdam.

  8. Antwerp tramway network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antwerp_tramway_network

    The first horse tram line opened in Antwerp on 25 May 1873. [1] It linked the church in Berchem (now a district of Antwerp) with the Meir, an avenue in the city center. Nine years later, already 9 lines of horse-drawn trams existed in Antwerp. There was also one omnibus route. The public transport of Antwerp was exploited by nine different ...

  9. Transport in Belgium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Belgium

    Regional transport in Belgium is operated by regional companies: De Lijn in Flanders operates the Kusttram and the Antwerp pre-metro and tram, and the tram in Gent, as well as a bus network both urban and interurban, TEC in Wallonia operates the Charleroi lightrail system as well as a bus network and MIVB/STIB in the Brussels Capital-Region ...