Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Stockholm Central station was the busiest station on the Stockholm commuter rail, with about 53,000 boarding the trains and about as many disembarking every weekday (as of 2005). The commuter rail used two island platforms, one for tracks 13 and 14 (southbound trains) and one for tracks 15 and 16 (northbound trains).
Vasagatan is a major street in central Stockholm named after King Gustav Vasa. In its southern end it is connected to the old town Gamla Stan by the bridge Vasabron, from where it stretches north to the public square Norra Bantorget. It passes in front of the Stockholm Central Station and is intercepted by Kungsgatan.
Stockholm City Station is a railway station in central Stockholm, Sweden. Opened on 10 July 2017, the station is located on the Stockholm City Line and is located directly below T-Centralen (the hub of the Stockholm Metro) and interchange with Stockholm Central Station. The station serves all Stockholm Commuter Rail trains. [2]
It is located in the Norrmalm district of central Stockholm, directly adjacent to Stockholm Central Station and Stockholm City commuter train station. T-Centralen is also the name of the terminus for the Spårväg City tram line. [2] T-Centralen is the only station in Stockholm Metro where all three metro lines converge.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Stockholm Municipality's boroughs: Stockholm City Centre covers the eastern third.The map also shows South Stockholm's and West Stockholm's boroughs.. Stockholm City Centre (Swedish: Stockholms innerstad, Innerstaden, Inre staden) is in Stockholm Municipality, also known as the City of Stockholm, part of the Stockholm urban area in Sweden.
Over the centuries, Stockholm's roads evolved, starting with Göta landsväg, the only southern route until the 1670s, and expanding through major developments such as Klas Fleming’s 17th-century street regulations [17] and Albert Lindhagen’s urban planning in the late 19th century. [18]
Götgatan (Original Swedish Göthegatan [1] for "Gothia Street") is the name of one of the longest streets in central Stockholm on the Southern Isle of the city. The street itself has existed since the 12th century, and has had its name since the 1640s, the name based on it being a part of the old Göta highway.