Ad
related to: transport bucuresti sibiu pret
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Surface transport in Bucharest is run by Bucharest-Ilfov Intercommunity Development Association for Public Transport (TPBI) and it is operated by Societatea de Transport București (STB), Societatea de Transport Voluntari (STV), a.o.. TPBI consists of an extensive network of buses, trolleybuses, trams and light rail. The TPBI network is one of ...
Bucharest Metro is part of the Bucharest public transport network which also includes STB, which operates a complex network of buses, trolleybuses, light rail and trams. STB is Bucharest's surface public network system, while Bucharest Metro operates underground (a short stretch between Dimitrie Leonida and Tudor Arghezi metro stations is the ...
Societatea de Transport București (STB; English: Bucharest Transport Company) is the main public transit operator in Bucharest, Romania, owned by the Municipality of Bucharest. From 1990 to 2018, the company had a different legal status and was known as the Regia Autonomă de Transport București ( RATB ).
An Ikarus 415T trolley. This is a list of the 16 trolleybus routes running in Bucharest, Romania, operated by the city's public transport company, STB as of March 2024. [1] For more information about Bucharest's trolleybus network, see Trolleybuses in Bucharest.
Tursib is the local public transport operator in Sibiu, Romania, operating bus service. It also services outlying areas and villages. It is a joint-stock company created in 1998. [1] Originally, Tursib's network also included trolleybuses and a suburban/rural tram line to Rășinari.
This section of the motorway is fully operational and is composed of two segments: Bucharest – Pitești and Pitești bypass. The Bucharest – Pitești segment (95.9 km) is the first motorway class road built in Romania and remained the only one for more than 15 years, until the completion of the Fetești – Cernavodă segment on the A2 motorway in 1987.
The A3 motorway (Romanian: Autostrada A3) is a partially built motorway in Romania, planned to connect Bucharest with the Transylvania region and the north-western part of the country.
In 2013, the Romanian government has reportedly changed the plans in order to provide the connection from Sibiu to Bucharest alternative to A1 via Pitești as part of the Trans European Transport Network, [3] thus implementing it as a motorway rather than expressway.