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M2 (20.28 km (12.6 mi)) is one of the five lines of metro of the Bucharest Metro. [2] [3] The M2 Line runs from Pipera to Tudor Arghezi, thus linking the north to the south of the city. The line is the busiest on the system, passing through a multitude of neighbourhoods, and also the only line to serve the centre of the city.
Constantin Brâncoveanu is a metro station in Bucharest.It is named after Constantin Brâncoveanu, a Wallachian prince (1654–1714).. It is located at the junction of the Olteniței Road (Șoseaua Olteniței) and the Constantin Brâncoveanu boulevard (Bd.
The metro network and the national rail network have almost similar track gauge (using the 1,432 mm / 4 ft 8 + 3 ⁄ 8 in vs 1,435 mm / 4 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in) and loading gauge but not the same electrification system (the metro uses 750 V DC third rail [a] whereas the Romanian Railways use 25 kV 50 Hz AC overhead lines) making it possible for new ...
The probit model is usually credited to Chester Bliss, who coined the term "probit" in 1934, [8] and to John Gaddum (1933), who systematized earlier work. [9] However, the basic model dates to the Weber–Fechner law by Gustav Fechner , published in Fechner (1860) , and was repeatedly rediscovered until the 1930s; see Finney (1971 , Chapter 3.6 ...
The M6 Line will have a total of 16 stations: 4 stations shared with the existing M4 Line and 12 planned new stations: Pajura, Expoziției, Piața Montreal, Gara Băneasa, Aeroport Băneasa, Tokyo, Washington, Paris, Bruxelles, Otopeni, Ion I.C. Brătianu, and Aeroport Otopeni.
Piața Unirii (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈpjat͡sa uˈnirij], Union Square) is the largest square in central Bucharest, Romania, and one of the largest public spaces in Europe, being located in the center of the capital where Sectors 1, 2, 3, and 4 meet.
The original North railway station was built between 1868—1872. The foundation stone was placed on 10 September 1868 in the presence of King Carol I of Romania. The building was designed as a U-shaped structure. The first railways between Roman – Galați – Bucharest – Pitești were put into service on 13 September 1872.
[12] Works on section 3 were allowed to begin in May 2021, [13] but the contract for section 4 was terminated by the Bucharest Court of Appeal, who obliged the CNAIR to review the bids of the Chinese company China Railway, of the Turkish company Nurol, and of the Italian company Rizzani, all who challenged the winning bid for the said section. [14]