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Busiest railway stations in Austria Source: ÖBB; Rank Station Daily passenger movements Year Number of Platforms Locale State Image Source 1 Wien Hauptbahnhof: 123,500 2018/2019 12 Vienna [1] 2 Wien Meidling: 78,226 2018/2019 8 [1] 3 Wien Mitte: 61,872 2018/2019 3 [1] 4 Wien Praterstern: 59,123 2018/2019 4 [1] 5 Wien Floridsorf: 51,957 2018/ ...
The small town of Gmunden in Upper Austria counts a tramway line, which since 2018 is linked to the railway line to Vorchdorf. The village of Serfaus in Tyrol , with the U-Bahn Serfaus , [ 7 ] is sometimes considered as the smallest town with a subway in the world .
High-speed railway lines in Austria (4 P) N. Narrow gauge railways in Austria (8 C, 1 P) P. Proposed railway lines in Austria (1 P) R. Rapid transit lines in Austria ...
Headquarters in Vienna Railjet (RJ), the high-speed-train of ÖBB Intercity-Express (ICE) Map of the main network in Austria InterCity (IC) on the Semmering railway ÖBB Nightjet (NJ) train in München Hbf An ÖBB EuroCity (EC) train in Bolzano, South Tyrol RegionalExpress train (REX) in Vienna Regional train (R) in Styria The Vienna S-Bahn is a suburban metro railway network in the ...
Railway stations in Austria by decade of opening (17 C) Railway stations in Austria by year of closing (4 C) Railway stations in Austria by year of opening (46 C) R.
The Salzburg-Tyrol Railway (German: Salzburg-Tiroler-Bahn) is a main line railway in Austria. It runs through the states of Salzburg and Tyrol ( North Tyrol ) from the city of Salzburg to Wörgl and belongs to the core network ( Kernnetz ) of the Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB).
Railway stations in Upper Austria (8 P) V. Railway stations in Vorarlberg (45 P) This page was last edited on 15 February 2019, at 00:45 (UTC). Text is available ...
The Western Railway (German: Westbahn) is a two-track, partly four-track, electrified railway line in Austria that runs from Vienna to Salzburg via St. Pölten and Linz Hauptbahnhof and is one of the major lines of Austria. It was originally opened as the Empress Elisabeth Railway in 1858 (Vienna–Linz).