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Lingampalli railway station is a railway station in Hyderabad, Telangana, India. Localities like BHEL Township and University of Hyderabad are accessible from this station. Some trains such as Palnadu Express and other Express and Passenger trains originating or passing from Hyderabad and Secunderabad railway stations halt at this station.
The IITH campus is on a land area of 576 acres (234 ha). Despite being called IIT Hyderabad, its campus is about 60 km from the main city. The academic building is designed by New Delhi-based ARCOP, and hostels, Lecture Hall, and academic departments by Pune-based acclaimed American architect Prof. Christopher Charles Benninger.
The 90-kilometre (56 mi) system caters to the city of Hyderabad and the neighbouring suburban areas connecting Hyderabad, Secunderabad, Falaknuma, Lingampally, Medchal and Umdanagar with a total of 133 MMTS services. Currently 86 MMTS services are being operated due to the effect of COVID-19. [6]
1 and 2: Long distance, inter-city express trains, such as the Rajdhani Express, Garib Rath Express, and Telangana Express; 3–5: Inter-city express trains with fewer passengers; most are regional trains. 6A,6B and 7A,7B: Hyderabad MMTS and suburban rail [30] 8: Regional and some mail express trains; 9: Special trains or other trains at peak hours
Secunderabad–Bolarum route is scheduled to take off as a part of the phase 2 of the Hyderabad Multi-Modal Transport System in December 2018., however was delayed due to paucity of funds. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The work of the section is nearing to completion in February 2020. [ 5 ] .
Hyderabad railway division is one of the six divisions of South Central Railway zone of the Indian Railways. [1] [2] The headquarters of the Division is at Secunderabad and its zonal headquarters is at Secunderabad. Even though Hyderabad has its own Division, the Hyderabad Deccan railway station itself falls under Secunderabad Railway Division. [3]
James Street circa 1880, an important shopping district in Secunderabad [6]. Following the dissolution of the Chalukya empire into four parts in the 11th century, the areas around the present-day Hyderabad and Secunderabad came under the control of the Kakatiya dynasty (1158–1310), whose seat of power was at Warangal, 148 km (92 mi) northeast of modern Hyderabad.
The Nizam of Hyderabad ruled over the Deccan region from the 18th century and under his reign, the railway line between Secunderabad and Manmad was constructed in 1905 by the Nizam's Guaranteed State Railway. [1] The Secunderabad-Mudkhed portion of the line was approved for doubling in 2023. [7]