Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Cluj-Napoca Metro is an underground rapid-transit system under construction in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. When opened, it will become Romania's second mass transit network after the Bucharest Metro . The system is of light metro type with a transport capacity of around 15,200–21,600 passengers per hour per direction . [ 2 ]
The M6 Line will have a total of 16 stations: 4 stations shared with the existing M4 Line and 12 planned new stations: Pajura, Expoziției, Piața Montreal, Gara Băneasa, Aeroport Băneasa, Tokyo, Washington, Paris, Bruxelles, Otopeni, Ion I.C. Brătianu, and Aeroport Otopeni.
By 1944, it featured a beam approach system and two concrete runways, one of 1,370 metres (4,490 ft) aligned North-South and one of 1,190 metres (3,900 ft) aligned East-West. [6] After 23 August 1944, the airport was used to launch air raids on Bucharest in support of the German efforts to overthrow the new government. [ 7 ]
As of 2024, Bucharest Metro is the only metro system in Romania; with a second one, the Cluj-Napoca Metro, ... Eroilor 2 6.87 kilometres (4.27 mi), 10 stations [20]
It is divided into two major sections, the northern section and the southern section. The northern section has been widened to four lanes in 2010, [2] between the Chitila and the Voluntari junctions, [3] and a cable-stayed bridge was opened along the ring road in April 2011, in the Otopeni area, which overpasses the railway ring [4] (built by a joint-venture of the Spanish company FCC and the ...
Bucharest has a fairly extensive metro system consisting of five lines (M1, M2, M3, M4, and M5) ran by Metrorex.In total, the network is 80.1 km (49.8 mi) long and has 64 stations, [1] with 1.5 km (0.9 mi) average distance between stops.
Dimitrie Cantemir Christian University (Romanian: Universitatea Creștină "Dimitrie Cantemir") is a private university in Bucharest.The university was founded in 1990 by Momcilo Luburici and Corina-Adriana Dumitrescu as the Dimitrie Cantemir Independent University, which has since developed 17 faculties in Bucharest, Brașov, Cluj-Napoca, Constanța and Timișoara.
In October 2018, the lot 2 was awarded to the Romanian company Trameco, part of the Selina Group, [80] but this was challenged [67] and only as of June 2020, the contract has been signed with that specific company. [81] It should take 6 months for projection and 18 months for construction, being valued at 67.5 million euro. [81]