Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In operation since 1866, [5] the Budapest tram network is among the world's largest tram networks by route length—operating on 174 kilometres (108 mi) of total route [3] —and is the busiest in the world.
Line 2 (officially: East-West Line, Metro 2 or M2, and unofficially: Red Line) is the second line of the Budapest Metro. The line runs east from Déli pályaudvar in north-central Buda under the Danube to the city center , from where it continues east following the route of Rákóczi út to its terminus at Örs vezér tere .
CAF Urbos tram on Line 19 CAF Urbos 3: After a dispute over the contract for new Budapest trams between Škoda and CAF, the latter company won the tender to supply the trams for Budapest. 37 were originally ordered, but this was increased to 47. There was also an option of a further 77 trams. 35 of the trams are 5-section 34 metre long trams ...
Printable version; In other projects ... Fővám tér is a station of Line 4 of the Budapest Metro, ... Tram: 2, 2B, 23, 47, 48, 49; References
Keleti pályaudvar (Keleti Railway Station) is a transfer station on M2 and M4 lines of the Budapest Metro. The Line M2 station was opened on 2 April 1970 as part of the inaugural section of Line M2, between Deák Ferenc tér and Örs vezér tere .
The Tram Line 1 of Budapest (in Hungarian: budapesti 1-es jelzésű villamosvonal) is a line operated by BKK Zrt., the transport authority of Budapest. It was commissioned in 1984 [ 1 ] between Bécsi út / Vörösvári út and Lehel utca .
The Budapest Metro (Hungarian: Budapesti metró, pronounced [ˈbudɒpɛʃti ˈmɛtroː]) is the rapid transit system in the Hungarian capital Budapest.Opened in 1896, it is the world's second oldest electrified underground railway after the City and South London Railway of 1890, now part of the London Underground, and the third oldest underground railway with multiple stations, after the ...
Blaha Lujza tér is a station of the M2 (East-West) line of the Budapest Metro. It is a major transport junction. The station was opened on 2 April 1970 as part of the inaugural section of Line M2, between Deák Ferenc tér and Örs vezér tere. [1] The square is named after Lujza Blaha, an actress (1850–1926).