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Milan Metro network map The logo. The Milan Metro is the rapid transit/metro system serving Milan, Italy.The network comprises 5 lines, identified by different numbers and colors, with a total route length of 112 kilometres (70 mi) and 125 stations.
The Milan Metro (Italian: Metropolitana di Milano) is the rapid transit system serving Milan, Italy, operated by Azienda Trasporti Milanesi. The network consists of five lines with a total network length of 111.8 kilometres (69.5 mi), and a total of 125 stations (+2 in construction), mostly underground. It has a daily ridership of about 1.4 ...
Bicocca is an underground station with two tracks in one tunnel and, like all the other stations on Line 5, is wheelchair accessible. It is located at the intersection of Viale Fulvio Testi, Via Esperia and Via Rodi, and also has exits to Via Luigi Pulci.
This is an underground station, located under Milano Porta Garibaldi railway station. Garibaldi is the only Metro station in Milan, along with surface station Cascina Gobba , to have four tracks: two tracks are used for normal access to the trains, while the other two, located outside the platforms, are not used, one of them being partially ...
The station was opened 7 June 1981 [2] with the opening of the Cologno Monzese branch from Cascina Gobba. [3] Between 9 July 2010 and 18 December 2011 [4] the station was renovated.
Centrale FS is a station on Lines 2 and 3 of the Milan Metro in Milan, Italy.The Line 2 station was opened on 27 April 1970 as a one-station extension from Caiazzo.On 21 July 1971, the line was extended to Garibaldi FS. [2]
The works for the construction of the station began in July 2011, [2] as part of the second section of the line, from Garibaldi FS to San Siro Stadio.It was opened to the public on 20 June 2015, nearly two months after the opening of this section of the line, and five months earlier than scheduled.
Opening poster for the new line. The Lambrate FS station entrance.. The first part of the line, from Caiazzo to Cascina Gobba, was opened in September 1969.. The interurban sections of Line 2 were originally built as part of a fast tramway, the Linee celeri dell'Adda ("Adda fast lines"), opened in 1968 from Cimiano up to Gorgonzola.