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  2. List of highways in Portugal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_highways_in_Portugal

    Lisbon to Porto: A2 north/south Lisbon to Faro: A3 north/south Porto to the Spanish border in the direction of Vigo: A4 east/west Porto to Bragança and to the Spanish border in the direction of Zamora: A5 east/west Lisbon to Cascais: A6 east/west Begins when the A2 makes a downward turn and goes to the Spanish border by Elvas: A7 east/west

  3. Roads in Portugal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roads_in_Portugal

    Roads in Portugal are defined by the Plano Rodoviário Nacional (PRN, English: National Road Plan), which describes the existing and planned network of Portuguese roads.. The present plan in force is the 2000 National Road Plan (PRN 2000), approved in 1

  4. BMX bike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMX_bike

    Flatland – flatland style BMX bikes have different frame geometry to traditional park BMX bikes because flatland riding requires precise balance on multiple parts of the bike. Park – park style BMX bikes (also called vert) are often made lighter by reducing the structural strength of particular areas of the bike, which is possible because ...

  5. GT Bicycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GT_Bicycles

    The models would stay this way until 1984, when their first freestyle bike was released, the Pro Performer. In 1983, GT signed freestyle BMX riders Bob Morales and Eddie Fiola to design and eventually ride a new freestyle bike the Pro Performer. At the time, the Performer was the only other dedicated freestyle bike besides the Haro Freestyler ...

  6. BMX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BMX

    In the UK, BMX was a craze which took off in the early 1980s, specifically 1982 and 1983, when the BMX bike became the must-have bicycle for children and teenagers. [ citation needed ] The 1983 cult movie BMX Bandits helped establish the sport further worldwide.

  7. Linha do Algarve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linha_do_Algarve

    The connection to Faro was completed on 21 February 1889, [5] but only opened on 1 July of the same year. [ 6 ] The railway reached Olhão on 28 March 1904 (although the station was only opened on 15 May of that year [ 7 ] ), Fuseta railway station on 1 September, [ 7 ] Luz on 31 January 1905, [ 7 ] Tavira on 19 March, and Vila Real de Santo ...

  8. Faro, Portugal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faro,_Portugal

    At the time, the area was known as Ossonoba, and was the most important urban centre of southern Portugal and commercial port for agricultural products, fish, and minerals. [ 6 ] Between the second and eighth centuries, the city was under the domain of the Romans, then the Byzantines , and later Visigoths, before being conquered by the Arabic ...

  9. Faro railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faro_railway_station

    Faro station (Portuguese: Estação de Faro) is the main railway station in the city of Faro, Portugal, operated by Comboios de Portugal. [1] It opened on 1 July 1889. The line to the north-west is electrified, using overhead catenary. The line east, to the terminus at Vila Real de Santo António, is not.