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Ciudad Lineal [θjuˈðað lineˈal] is a station on Line 5 of the Madrid Metro, named for the Ciudad Lineal district. It is located in fare Zone A. [ 1 ] The station serves an important urban and regional bus terminal.
The ‘Ciudad Lineal’ takes a form of a city 400 meters wide, centered on a tramway (line 70 - closed in 1972) and a thoroughfare running in parallel. The main street in the district, calle de Arturo Soria, bears his name. The city is the current headquarters for the flag carrier airline of Spain, Iberia. [1]
Metrovalencia [a] is an urban rail including rapid transit and trams, serving Valencia and its metropolitan area.The network is a modern amalgamation of former FEVE narrow gauge electric-operated suburban railways.
In Puerto Rico, a cuerda is a traditional unit of land area nearly equivalent to 3,930 square meters, [1] [2] or 4,700 square yards, 0.971 acre, or 0.393 hectare (ha). The precise conversion is 1 cuerda = 3,930.395625 m 2. [2]
Several units were used to measure area. As in the 1920s, one caballeria Cubana was equal to 134,202 m 2. [1] Some of units which were used in the 1920s too in addition to metric system, and which belonged to old Spanish, American, and local, are provided below: [1]
Line C of the Buenos Aires Metro runs for a stretch under the avenue. Line A , Line B , Line D , and Line E have stations when their course intersects the avenue. Notably, lines B, C, and D share a station underneath the Obelisk, which is the focal point of the subway system and features a retail concourse which also serves as an underpass.
Mexico City Metro Line 4 is the fourth line of Mexico City Metro. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The line color is aqua blue and it runs from north to south of the city crossing the city center by its easternmost area. In 2019 it had a total ridership of 29,013,032 passengers, making it the least used line on the system.
The infrastructure is gradually being upgraded to rapid transit standards, in order to create the San Sebastián Metro (Spanish: Metro de San Sebastián, Basque: Donostiako metroa). The line is commonly known as Topo ( Spanish for 'mole'), due to the large number of tunnels present. [ 2 ]