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the Havana ring road (Spanish: 1er anillo de La Habana), which starts at a tunnel under the entrance to Havana Harbor; the section of the Via Blanca from Matanzas to Varadero (toll road) an autopista from Nueva Gerona to Santa Fe, in the Isla de la Juventud; Older roads include the Carretera Central, and the Via Blanca from Havana to Matanzas.
The Havana MetroBus (Spanish: MetroBus de La Habana), shortened as MB, [1] is a public bus network serving the city of Havana, Cuba. It is the principal public transport network of the Cuban capital.
Eastern entrance to the Havana Tunnel, under the Malecón and the San Salvador de la Punta Fortress. The Autopista A2, also known as Primer Anillo de La Habana (First Ring of Havana), [1] is a Cuban motorway serving the city of Havana, [2] that connects almost all of the Cuban motorways to each other.
The Havana Suburban Railway (Spanish: Red del ferrocarril suburbano de La Habana) is a passenger suburban rail network serving the city of Havana, capital of Cuba, and its suburbs. Owned by the national company Ferrocarriles de Cuba, it represents the only suburban rail system of the Caribbean island.
Havana Tunnel is a route under the Havana Bay, built by the French company Societé de Grand Travaux de Marseille between 1957 and 1958. [4] [5] The president of the Republic Fulgencio Batista planned to expand the city to Habana del Este with a new suburb, and a new connection between Havana Vieja and the east side across Havana Bay was required.
Havana Central (Spanish: La Habana Central; the "Central Railway Station", Estación Central de Ferrocarriles) is the main railway terminal in Havana and the largest railway station in Cuba, is the hub of the rail system in the country.
Transferring freight containers on the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1928. In the United Kingdom, containers were first standardised by the Railway Clearing House (RCH) in the 1920s, allowing both railway-owned and privately-owned vehicles to be carried on standard container flats.
Planar four-bar linkages are constructed from four links connected in a loop by four one-degree-of-freedom joints.A joint may be either a revolute joint – also known as a pin joint or hinged joint – denoted by R, or a prismatic joint – also known as a sliding pair – denoted by P. [Note 1]