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Lier railway station (Dutch: Station Lier; French: Gare de Lierre) [a] is a railway station in Lier, Antwerp, Belgium. [1] The station opened on 23 April 1855 on railway lines 13 and 15. Until 1988, the station was also on line 205, when this line closed. The train services are operated by the National Railway Company of Belgium (NMBS/SNCB). [2]
Station Code Line Province Opened Aalst: FLS: 50, 57, 82: East Flanders: 1853 Aalst-Kerrebroek: FLSK: 82: East Flanders: Aalter: FLT: 50A: East Flanders: 1838 ...
Every 2 hours Weekends L 07 Erquelinnes–Erquelinnes-Village–Solre-sur-Sambre–Labuissière–Fontaine-Valmont–Lobbes–Thuin–Hourpes–Landelies–Marchienne-Zone–Charleroi-Sud: 1x per hour; every 2 hours at weekends Stations in italics are not served at weekends L 08
Template parameters [Edit template data] This template prefers block formatting of parameters. Parameter Description Type Status; table row type: 1: use "top" to generate a headings row, "bottom" to close the table, or omit this parameter for regular table rows. String: suggested: stop ID: stop: id code for the platform. Unknown: suggested ...
1 Display of stations with two words in name. 5 comments. 2 LIRR Branch Timetable. 2 comments. 3 Traintime. 1 comment. Toggle the table of contents. Template talk ...
SNCB website; List of stations: Liste des gares SNCB (in French) - Lijst van NMBS-stations (in Dutch) Collection of Google Earth locations of SNCB stations (requires Google Earth software) from the Google Earth Community forum. Documents and clippings about National Railway Company of Belgium in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Displays an infobox for a rail, bus, tram or intermodal station. Template parameters This template has custom formatting. Parameter Description Type Status Name name Name of the station String suggested Name language name_lang ISO 639-1 code (for name) String optional Native name native_name Name in local language String optional Native name language native_name_lang ISO 639-1 code (for native ...
All railway lines in Belgium are identified by a route number and these numbers are in widespread general use (for example, in passenger train timetables). Most of the numbers have remained unchanged since the creation of the SNCB/NMBS in the 1920s, although line closures and the construction of new routes have led to a few alterations over the years.