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Lier railway station (Dutch: Station Lier; French: Gare de Lierre) [a] is a railway station in Lier, Antwerp, Belgium. [1] The station opened on 23 April 1855 on railway lines 13 and 15. Until 1988, the station was also on line 205, when this line closed. The train services are operated by the National Railway Company of Belgium (NMBS/SNCB). [2]
Every 2 hours Weekends L 07 Erquelinnes–Erquelinnes-Village–Solre-sur-Sambre–Labuissière–Fontaine-Valmont–Lobbes–Thuin–Hourpes–Landelies–Marchienne-Zone–Charleroi-Sud: 1x per hour; every 2 hours at weekends Stations in italics are not served at weekends L 08
NMBS/SNCB is an autonomous government company, formed in 1926 as successor to the Belgian State Railways.From 1942 to 1944, amid Nazi Germany's occupation of Belgium, the company was paid 51 million Belgian francs by the Nazi Germany to send 28 trains carrying 25,843 Jews and Roma people to Auschwitz where only 1,195 survived. [2]
Station Code Line Province Opened Aalst: FLS: 50, 57, 82: East Flanders: 1853 Aalst-Kerrebroek: FLSK: 82: East Flanders: Aalter: FLT: 50A: East Flanders: 1838 ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... This is a list of NMBS/SNCB locomotive classes, classes of locomotive operated by ... SNCB Type 16 – 2-6-0;
The class 16 locomotives were built to work cross border services from Belgium.They are equipped to run in France, Netherlands and Germany.They have been displaced from these workings by Thalys electric multiple units and ended up working a few peak hour commuter trains until 2007 when they were withdrawn with two of them saved for preservation.
NMBS/SNCB Class 41 DMUs are diesel multiple-unit trains operated by the National Railway Company of Belgium (NMBS/SNCB). They are the standard train for Belgian internal workings which cannot be worked by EMUs. They work under the 25 kV electrification in the South of Belgium as well as on the non-electrified lines in the North.
Some were repainted into yellow and blue to increase visibility. All ended up blue when SNCB decided that yellow locomotives needed to be washed more often than dark ones, a lesson since forgotten given the livery of Classes 13, 18², 19², AM96, AR41 and M6 and updated M5 coaching stock. 2627 was the last yellow electric on the SNCB.