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  2. Rail transport in Spain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_transport_in_Spain

    Rail transport in Spain operates on four rail gauges and services are operated by a variety of private and public operators. Total railway length in 2020 was 15,489 km (9,953 km electrified). [ 2 ] The Spanish high-speed rail network is the longest HSR network in Europe with 3,966 km (2,464 mi) and the second longest in the world, after China 's.

  3. High-speed rail in Spain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-speed_rail_in_Spain

    The line supports the longest railway tunnel in Spain at 28 km in length and is served on the Madrid–León route by up to two AVE S-102 (Pato, max speed 330 km/h or 205 mph) trains per day with the fastest schedule lasting 2 hours and 6 minutes, one AVE S-106 (max speed 330 km/h or 205 mph) Madrid–Gijón train per day that covers the ...

  4. Yiwu–Madrid railway line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yiwu–Madrid_railway_line

    Yiwu–Madrid train in Madrid. The Yiwu–Madrid railway line is a railway route taken by container trains from the Chinese city of Yiwu to the Spanish city of Madrid, a distance of approximately 13,000 kilometres (8,100 mi), and the longest in the world. [1] The Trans-Siberian Railway was previously the longest.

  5. File:High Speed Railroad Map of Europe.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:High_Speed_Railroad...

    Rail speed maps in the United Kingdom can be found on the NetworkRail website, there is one map for each of the 8 routes (regions), in PDF documents called "Network Specification": Anglia , LNE and East Midlands, LNW, Scotland, South-East , Wales, Wessex, Western. "Route plans" on NetworkRail archives

  6. Renfe Feve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renfe_Feve

    Renfe Cercanías AM, [1] formerly known as Renfe Feve, is a division of state-owned Spanish railway company Renfe Operadora. It operates most of Spain's 1,250 km (777 mi) of metre-gauge railway. This division of Renfe was previously a stand-alone company named FEVE (Ferrocarriles de Vía Estrecha, Spanish for "Narrow-Gauge Railways). [2]

  7. Cercanías Valencia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cercanías_Valencia

    Cercanías Valencia (Valencian: Rodalia de València) is the commuter rail service that serves Valencia and its metropolis, Spain. It is operated by Cercanías Renfe, the commuter rail division of RENFE, the former monopoly of rail services in Spain. The network is owned by Adif, the national railway infrastructure company.

  8. Madrid–Málaga high-speed rail line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madrid–Málaga_high-speed...

    The Madrid–Málaga high-speed rail line is a standard gauge High-speed rail line of 512 km (318 mi) in length that links the city of Madrid with the city of Málaga in Spain. The line was inaugurated on 24 December 2007. At the time the service opened, Renfe Operadora was running 22 trains daily between Madrid and Málaga.

  9. Renfe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renfe

    Map of the Spanish rail network in 2019, with colour-coded track types. Renfe Operadora operates on conventional Iberian gauge (red), high speed (blue), and narrow gauge (green) lines. A Renfe train ticket. Renfe (Spanish pronunciation:, Eastern Catalan:), officially Renfe-Operadora, is Spain's national state-owned railway company.