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English: Map of Israel Railways passenger lines and stations in Hebrew and English. Freight lines and stations are not shown. The source SVG includes an interactive function to highlight each line in yellow dashed line individually by clicking the line itself. This effect can be cancelled globally by clicking the empty background within the ...
Compare with the redrawn route diagram, available below, which was redrawn from the Lines & Stations Map. [1] Some stations could be marked by the disabled access icon () according to the 2010 train schedule of Israel Railways [2]. Apart from these stations, there are other stations that are "accessible for handicapped people at some of the ...
This page was last edited on 12 December 2024, at 04:17 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
When Israel Railways reorganized the suburban service in the late 1990s the line was extended to Binyamina and Netanya railway station lost its terminus status (except for rush hours, when an additional train leaves the station for Tel Aviv and the southern suburbs). As part of the same reorganization it was decided that Inter-City trains would ...
Netanya–Sapir railway station (Hebrew: תחנת הרכבת נתניה – ספיר, Taḥanat HaRakevet Netanya Sapir) is an Israel Railways station located in the Sapir (more commonly known as Poleg) commercial/industrial zone in southern Netanya, on the North-South coastal line.
The Kiryat Eliezer Kaplan Industrial Zone was inaugurated in 1949 and Neve Itamar, founded in 1944, was annexed to Netanya. [16] [17] Netanya railway station opened in 1953. With Israel experiencing a wave of Jewish immigration from Europe, elsewhere in the Middle East, and North Africa, Netanya's population expanded.
Exterior view of Or Zaruaa Synagogue on 3 Refaeli Street. It was founded by Rabbi Amram Aburbeh in the Nahlat Ahim neighbourhood of Jerusalem and has been declared a historic preservation heritage site.
The first light rail line in Israel is the Jerusalem Light Rail, which opened in 2011. The line is 13.8 km (8.6 mi) long and goes from Mount Herzl in the west to Pisgat Ze'ev in the east. An extension of the western side to Hadassah Ein Kerem and the eastern side to Neve Ya'akov is under construction and was opened in 2023.