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Origin City Destination City Train Name/No. Operator Name Distance No. of stops Frequency Scheduled running time Moscow: Tashkent: Uzbekistan 505 Uzbek Railways: 3,379 km 26 1 to 3 times a month 72 hrs (~3 days) Kazan: Almaty: 114 / 113 Kazakhstan Temir Joly: 3,329 km 59 Оnce a week 64 hrs (~2.5 days) Kazan: Bishkek: 114 / 113 (additional ...
Temporary lines laid for a specific purposes are not considered unless specified. Countries include the nations listed in the List of sovereign states along with reference ISO 3166 codes which list ISO 3166-1 numeric three-digit country codes which are maintained by the United Nations Statistics Division.
United Kingdom - British Rail (BR) (privatized 1997) Vatican City - Ferrovie del Vaticano; Regional and private railways. Swiss BLS BLS Re4 class electric locomotive.
The theory of the world’s “longest rail ride” originated when the Laos-China railway opened for business, linking Kunming and Vientiane – a missing link in the rails between Europe and ...
The system length of a metro network is the sum of the lengths of all routes in the rail network in kilometers or miles. Each route is counted only once, regardless of how many lines pass over it, and regardless of whether it is single-track or multi-track , single carriageway or dual carriageway .
Many cities across Europe have a rapid transit system, commonly referred to as a metro, which is an electric railway. The world's first underground railway, the Metropolitan Railway, was opened in London in 1863. It is now part of London's rapid transit system that referred to as the London Underground, the longest
Train Name Train Number Train Operator Train Endpoints Operated Arctic Express Canterbury Travel: Rovaniemi – Kemijärvi: 2007 - 2008 Allegro AE 781 ... AE 788 Karelian Trains: Helsinki – St. Petersburg (Finlyandsky) 2010 - 2022 Aurora Borealis Express: 269 (northbound) 270 (southbound) VR Group: Helsinki – Kolari: present Botnia Express
This article provides a list of operational and under construction (or approved) high-speed rail networks, listed by country or region. While the International Union of Railways defines high-speed rail as public transport by rail at speeds of at least 200 km/h (124 mph) for upgraded tracks and 250 km/h (155 mph) or faster for new tracks, this article lists all the systems and lines that ...