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The inscription "Keleti Pályaudvar" visible on the main facade in Hungarian means "Eastern Station". Budapest Keleti station (Hungarian: Keleti pályaudvar, pronounced [ˈkɛlɛti ˈpaːjɒudvɒr]; "eastern railway station") is the main international and inter-city railway terminal in Budapest, Hungary.
The line has also been criticized for densely placed stations, some, such as Móricz Zsigmond körtér and Újbuda-központ, within a few hundred meters of one another. [8] On the other hand, the city government has conducted research showing that the new line will reduce travel times on a heavily used transit corridor, because travel in the ...
Keleti pályaudvar (Keleti Railway Station) is a transfer station on M2 and M4 lines of the Budapest Metro. The Line M2 station was opened on 2 April 1970 as part of the inaugural section of Line M2, between Deák Ferenc tér and Örs vezér tere. The Line M4 station was opened on 28 March 2014 as the eastern terminus of the inaugural section ...
Official version from map pdfs on BKK website: 20:28, 20 March 2014: 151 × 151 (998 bytes) Vampeare: ... Budapest Keleti station; Budapest Metro; Budapest Tram Line 1;
The Budapest–Hegyeshalom railway line is a major east–west railway line in Hungary. It runs 185.1 kilometres (115.0 mi) from Budapest Keleti station, one of the three principal terminals in Budapest, to Hegyeshalom, near the frontier with Austria. The line is double-tracked, electrified, and carries significant domestic and international ...
This is a list of the 48 stations of the Budapest Metro, which operates in Budapest, Hungary, including the dates of opening (and closure). Termini and interchange stations are in bold and bold italics, respectively. Stations with the access icon are barrier-free.
The Budapesti Közlekedési Központ (Hungarian: [ˈbudɒpɛʃti ˈkøzlɛkɛdeːʃi ˈkøspont], BKK), officially Budapesti Közlekedési Központ Zrt. ( transl. Centre for Budapest Transport ), is the largest public transport company in Budapest and one of the largest in Europe .
M2 runs in an east–west direction through the city, and it was the first metro line to cross the River Danube and reach Buda (the western part of Budapest). [7] It has a transfer station with Line 1 and Line 3 at Deák Ferenc tér, and a transfer station for Line 4 at Keleti pályaudvar.