Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Madrid Metro (Spanish: Metro de Madrid) is a rapid transit system serving the city of Madrid, capital of Spain. The system is the 14th longest rapid transit system in the world, with a total length of 293 km (182 mi). Its growth between 1995 and 2007 put it among the fastest-growing networks in the world at the time.
Hospital de Móstoles; Manuela Malasaña; Loranca; Hospital de Fuenlabrada; Parque Europa; Fuenlabrada Central; Parque de los Estados; Arroyo Culebro; Conservatorio; Alonso de Mendoza; Getafe Central; Juan de la Cierva; El Casar; Los Espartales; El Bercial; El Carrascal; Julián Besteiro; Casa del Reloj; Hospital Severo Ochoa; Leganés Central ...
Español: Mapa de la red del Metro de Madrid. Date: 29 December 2007: Source: ... Historia del metro; Usage on es.wikibooks.org Matemática Discreta/Teoría de grafos;
Avenida de América ([aβeˈniða ðe aˈmeɾika]; "Avenue of the Americas") is a multimodal station in Madrid, Spain that services Madrid Metro Line 4, Line 6, Line 7, and Line 9, as well as city buses and intercity and long-distance coaches. Between 1986 and 1996, it also served Line 8. The station is located below the intersections of ...
Line 4 is a rapid transit line of the Madrid Metro connecting the west and center of Madrid with the said city's northeastern end, running between Argüelles and Pinar de Chamartín. It consists of a total of 23 narrow-gauge stations with 60-metre platforms.
Nuevos Ministerios [ˈnweβos minisˈteɾjos] is a major multimodal rail station on the Madrid Metro and the Cercanías Madrid commuter rail network. It is located beneath the Nuevos Ministerios (New Ministries) government complex and the AZCA financial centre at the junction of the Paseo de la Castellana and Joaquín Costa and Raimundo Fernández Villaverde streets in Madrid, Spain.
Line 9 of the Madrid Metro is a rapid transit line in Madrid that originally opened on 31 January 1980 between Sainz de Baranda and Pavones.Later it was extended from Avenida de América to Herrera Oria on 3 June 1983, though this section was at the time separate from the original part until the missing fragment from Avenida de América to Sainz de Baranda was opened on 24 February 1986.
The Consorcio Regional de Transportes de Madrid (CRTM; literally: Regional Consortium of Transportation for Madrid) is an autonomous body created by Spanish law 5/1985 which is tasked with coordinating the public transport operations across multiple providers in the Community of Madrid.