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The communications tower at the RTBF's headquarters in Brussels. Originally named the Belgian National Broadcasting Institute (French: INR, Institut national belge de radiodiffusion; Dutch: NIR, Belgisch Nationaal Instituut voor de Radio-omroep), the state-owned broadcasting organisation was established by law on 18 June 1930, [citation needed] and from 1938 was housed in the Flagey Building ...
The third network is composed of provincial national roads. The first digit corresponds to a province—from 1 to 9—based upon the old provinces and in alphabetical order in French, thus: 1 is Province of Antwerp; 2 is Province of Brabant; 3 is Province of West Flanders; 4 is Province of East Flanders; 5 is Province of Hainaut; 6 is Province of Liège; 7 is Province of Limburg; 8 is Province ...
The N4 road in Belgium is a national road connecting Brussels to Luxembourg.It starts as chaussée de Wavre at Porte de Namur on the Brussels inner ring and runs south east through Wavre and Namur, Marche-en-Famenne, Bastogne, Martelange and Arlon before terminating as route de Luxembourg at the Luxembourg border.
The Greater Ring or Intermediate Ring (French: Moyenne Ceinture, pronounced [mwajɛn sɛ̃tyʁ]; Dutch: Middenring, pronounced [ˈmɪdə(n)ˌrɪŋ]) is a series of roadways in Brussels, Belgium, intermediate between the Small Ring and the main Brussels Ring motorway.
The road is one of the 9 major national routes in Belgium, but the only one that does not start in Brussels. The start of the N7 is at an intersection with the N6 in the Flemish city Halle, 19 km (12 mi) southeast of Brussels. The route starts running west and crosses the E429 highway before entering Wallonia.
N5 sign post. The N5 is a road in Belgium connecting the small ring in Brussels and Philippeville via Charleroi (commonly named French: Route de Philippeville till the ring of Charleroi).
Route information; Maintained by the Roads and Traffic Agency of the Flemish government: Length: 104 km (65 mi) Major junctions; West end: R31 in Ostend: East end: R0 in Brussels: Location; Country: Belgium: Highway system; Highways of Belgium; Motorways; National Roads
Founded in 1923 as a privately-run station called Radio Belgique, it was acquired by the state-run Belgian National Broadcasting Institute (INR/NIR) in 1930. It is a " generalist " station carrying a wide range of principally spoken-word and information-based programming, and is RTBF's main radio news channel.