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US 6 Bus. eastbound past US 6 in Tunkhannock Township. U.S. Route 6 Business (US 6 Bus.) is a two-mile-long (3.2 km) loop through the borough of Tunkhannock, Pennsylvania. The route was signed in 2000, as a wider (but still two-lane) bypass was constructed along the Susquehanna River to avoid the narrow old alignment. The business loop, also ...
North Dakota Highway 6; Ohio State Route 6 (1923-1927) (former) Ohio State Route 6 (1927) (former) Ohio State Route 6 (pre-1931) (former) Oklahoma State Highway 6; Oregon Route 6; Pennsylvania Route 6 (former) Rhode Island Route 6; South Carolina Highway 6; Tennessee State Route 6; Texas State Highway 6. Texas State Highway Loop 6 (former ...
Business State Highway 6-S (Bus. SH 6-S, formerly Loop 508) is a business loop that runs through Navasota on La Salle Avenue. The route was created in 1972 when SH 6 was rerouted further north and east around town; it is 6.3 miles (10.1 km) long. The road was redesignated as Bus. SH 6-S on June 21, 1990. [20]
On this day 2102 will power the very first steam passenger excursion from the railroad's Nesquehoning Campus to Tunkhannock for the borough's 43rd Annual Founder's Day Festival.
The European walking route E6. The E6 European long distance path or E6 path is one of the European long-distance paths from the northwest tip of Finland through Sweden, Denmark, Germany and Austria to the Adriatic coast in Slovenia. A second section starts again in Greece to finish in Turkey.
US 6 in Tunkhannock Township: US 6 in Tunkhannock: 2000: current Original route of US 6 through downtown Tunkhannock that was replaced by a wider bypass US 6 Bus. 14: 23 I-81/US 6/US 11 in Scranton: US 6 in Carbondale Township: 1999: current Original route of US 6 that was replaced by an expressway US 13 Bus. 3: 4.8 US 13/PA 291 in Trainer
Copenhagen Airport is also a stop of the Øresund Line. Øresundståg (Danish pronunciation: [ˈøːɐsɔnsˌtsʰɔˀw], Swedish pronunciation: [œrɛˈsɵ̂nːdsˌtoːɡ]) is a passenger train network operated by Transdev in the transnational Øresund Region of Denmark and Sweden.
In 1926, the Rotterdam–Amsterdam–Copenhagen run was extended to Malmö. [6]: 416 Singapore was first served in May 1933 (), when it was taken over from KNILM and added as an intermediate stop for the Amsterdam–Batavia line. [7] By April 1934 (), Berlin, Hamburg and Liverpool were already part of the European route network. [8]