Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The last major transport change of Budapest was the foundation of BKV in the 1960s. The foundation of BKK was decided on October 27, 2010 by the General Assembly of Budapest. They appointed Dávid Vitézy as CEO. From May 1, 2012 BKK began to do many functions of BKV: Operating public transportation, planning network, lines and time schedules
The five BHÉV lines are operated by the public transport company MÁV-HÉV Zrt., a subsidiary of Hungarian State Railways. Inside Budapest, standard BKK tickets and passes are valid on the BHÉV. Outside Budapest, a separate ticket must be purchased.
The Budapest Metro (Hungarian: Budapesti metró, pronounced [ˈbudɒpɛʃti ˈmɛtroː]) is the rapid transit system in the Hungarian capital Budapest.Opened in 1896, it is the world's second oldest electrified underground railway after the City and South London Railway of 1890, now a part of London Underground, and the third oldest underground railway with multiple stations, after the ...
United Transport Card of Chuvashia: Chuvashia government: 1 June 2008 Kazan: Transport Card: Kazan City Authority: Kemerovo: Electronic pass: Kemerovo transit: 20 Jan 2010 Lipetsk: Lipetsk Transport System united transport card: Lipetsk Transport: 1 Jan 2010 Moscow: Troika: Moscow Metro and Mosgortrans: 2 April 2013 Transport Card: Moscow Metro ...
The Budapest Cog-wheel Railway (Hungarian: budapesti fogaskerekű vasút) is a rack railway in the Buda part of the Hungarian capital city of Budapest. It connects a lower terminus at Városmajor [ hu ] , two tram stops away from the Széll Kálmán tér transport interchange, with an upper terminus at Széchenyihegy [ hu ] .
Budapest Puppet Theatre, House of Terror, Hungarian University of Fine Arts, Ferenc Liszt (Franz Liszt) Memorialhouse, Old Zeneakadémia (Academy of Music), Hungarian Journalists National Federation (MÚOSZ) headquarters 6: Kodály körönd (formerly: Körönd) 5: 3 May 1896 30 Dec 1973 (renovation) Nov 1995 (renovation) cut-and-cover ...
Budapesti Közlekedési Zrt. or BKV Zrt. (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈbudɒpɛʃti ˈkøzlɛkɛdeːʃi ˈzeːjɛrteː], "Budapest Transit Company", the abbreviation BKV stands for its earlier name Budapesti Közlekedési Vállalat) is the main public transport operator in Budapest, Hungary.
These funds, critics claim, would have been better invested in other large-scale transportation projects such as the connection of M2 to the Gödöllő HÉV or the construction of new tram lines. [8] Rumors that the M4 would be the most expensive metro line ever built, however, have been rebuffed by contractors.