Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Termini is an underground station of the Rome Metro. The station was inaugurated on 10 February 1955 as a station on Line B, and later became an interchange with Line A. The station is found in Piazza dei Cinquecento, under the Termini rail terminal. Together, the two stations form the main public transport hub in the city.
Module:Location map/data/Italy Rome is a location map definition used to overlay markers and labels on an equirectangular projection map of Rome. The markers are placed by latitude and longitude coordinates on the default map or a similar map image.
Roma Termini ↔ Nettuno; The FL8, a radial route, runs from Roma Termini, on the southern perimeter of Rome's city centre, in a south easterly direction, via the Rome–Formia–Naples railway, to Campoleone, and then south west, via the Albano–Nettuno railway, to Nettuno.
Roma Termini (in Italian, Stazione Termini) (IATA: XRJ) is the main railway station of Rome, Italy. It is named after the district of the same name, which in turn took its name from ancient Baths of Diocletian (in Latin , thermae ), which lies across the street from the main entrance.
On 26 August 1999 the line was curtailed to Giardinetti with the beginning of the improvement works outside the Grande Raccordo Anulare (GRA). As a result, the name of the line was changed in Rome–Giardinetti railway. The suburban services resumed as premetro outside the GRA on 2 October 2005. On 7 July 2008 the premetro was closed for the ...
Line A (Italian: Linea A) of the Rome Metro runs across the city from the north-west terminus of Battistini to the south-east terminus at Anagnina. It intersects with Line B at Termini and with Line C at San Giovanni. The line is marked orange on metro maps. Normally very crowded, Line A is estimated to transport nearly half a million people daily.
Roma Termini ↔ Ciampino ↔ Frascati / Albano Laziale / Velletri; The FL4, a radial route, runs from Roma Termini, on the southern perimeter of Rome's city centre, in a south easterly direction, via the Rome–Cassino–Naples railway, to Ciampino, and then fans out into three branches, to Frascati, Albano Laziale and Velletri, respectively.
Find the coordinates (generally latitude and longitude) of the geographic location you want to link; Select the template with the appropriate scale for the map to zoom into; Add the coordinates to the template using the template's format; Place the template reference into the article; Suggestions for accomplishing each step are below.