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Iqbal Town (Urdu, Punjabi: اقبال ٹاون) also known as Allama Iqbal Zone is an administrative zone in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It forms one of 10 zones of the Lahore metropolitan area .
The Lahore Metro or Lahore Rapid Mass Transit System is an under construction rapid transit system (metro train system) for Lahore, the second largest city of Pakistan. [8] First proposed in 1991, funding was not secured, and in 2012 it was abandoned by the Punjab government in favour of the more cost–effective Lahore Metro Bus System which ...
Allama Iqbal Town (Urdu: علامہ اقبال ٹاؤن) (also known as Iqbal Town or abbreviated as AIT) is a commercial and residential locality in the south-western Lahore, in Pakistan's Punjab province. [1] It is named after Allama Muhammad Iqbal, the national poet of Pakistan. Development was started in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
A depot was constructed at the northeast portion of the line, directly east of the Lahore Ring Road, [33] while a stabling yard was constructed at the line's southern terminus at Ali Town. [34] The depot is also the site of the Orange Line's central control centre. [35] The depot and stabling yard respectively required 0.56 and 0.49 kilometres ...
Lahore Transport Company was established in 1984 to ease the traffic conditions of Lahore and improve bus services. LTC got all the transport responsibilities of traveling in Lahore in December 2009. A BRTS fleet of 650 Buses was introduced. It was given the name "Lahore Bus Company". However, the BRTS did not have dedicated lanes and had to ...
Lahore's posh Model Town was established as a "garden town" suburb in 1921, while Krishan Nagar locality was laid in the 1930s near The Mall and Walled City. The Mall, Lahore's pre-independence commercial core, features many examples of colonial architecture. Lahore played an important role in the independence movements of both India [106] and ...
A depot was constructed at the northeast portion of the line, directly east of the Lahore Ring Road, [31] while a stabling yard was constructed at the line's southern terminus at Ali Town. [31] The depot is also the site of the Orange Line's central control centre. [31] The depot and stabling yard respectively required 0.56 and 0.49 kilometres ...
The station was built during the colonial era, and was built just outside the Walled City at the intersection of Empress Road, Allama Iqbal Road and Circular Road. Lahore Junction station was constructed by Mian Mohammad Sultan Chughtai, a former official of the Mughal Empire , between 1859 and 1860.