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  2. Bucharest North railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucharest_North_Railway...

    As of 2009, Gara de Nord served about 200 routes, including domestic routes operated by Căile Ferate Române, Regiotrans and Transferoviar Călători, as well international trains to Austria , Belarus , Bulgaria (Sofia, Varna and Burgas), Hungary , Republic of Moldova , Russia (Moscow and Saratov), Turkey , and Ukraine (Kyiv, Dnipro and ...

  3. Gara de Nord metro station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gara_de_Nord_metro_station

    Gara de Nord is the name of two separate metro stations, situated near Gara de Nord train station in Bucharest and serving lines M1 and M4. Neither of the metro stations nor the railway station are interconnected, passengers being required to use the next station to switch from M1 to M4 directly, without having to validate a ticket.

  4. List of railway stations in Romania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_railway_stations...

    Below is the list of railway stations in Romania.Although there are hundreds of stations only those stations which can be linked to articles in Wikipedia are shown. Arad Central railway station Bucharest North railway station (Gara de Nord) Botoșani railway station (Gara Botoșani) Suceava Nord railway station (Gara Suceava Nord)

  5. Bucharest Metro Line M6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucharest_Metro_Line_M6

    The M6 Line will connect Bucharest North railway station (Gara de Nord) to Henri Coandă International Airport (Aeroportul Otopeni). The line is expected to be completed by 2028. [1] [2] As of 2019, only the section from 1 Mai station to Tokyo station had secured funding. [3]

  6. Basarab railway station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basarab_railway_station

    Basarab railway station Train at the station. Basarab railway station (Romanian: Gara Basarab) in Bucharest is situated near the city's main station, Gara de Nord. [1] Built in 1959 to handle a share of the main station's traffic and mainly used by short-distance commuter trains run by Căile Ferate Române, it is often considered to be an annex of Gara de Nord, to which it was linked by a ...

  7. Bucharest Metro Line M1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucharest_Metro_Line_M1

    A few extensions followed, namely the branch line from Eroilor to Industriilor (today Preciziei) in 1983, from Semănătoarea to Crângași in 1984 and then to Gara de Nord in 1987. [3] In 1989 the section between Gara de Nord and Dristor 2 was opened, however at the time this was considered the M3, thus completing the Crângași-Dristor branch.

  8. Căile Ferate Române - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Căile_Ferate_Române

    On 10 September 1868, Bucharest's Gara de Nord (North Station) was finalised. In January 1880, the Romanian Parliament voted to transfer the ownership of the Vârciorova-Roman line from the private administration of the Strousberg consortium to state ownership, under the administration of CFR. 1880 therefore marks the start of the Căile Ferate ...

  9. Bucharest Metro Line M4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bucharest_Metro_Line_M4

    The tunnels were built up to where Parc Bazilescu is today. Construction was abandoned afterwards and was resumed later on in the 90's. The first section of the M4 opened on 1 March 2000 from Gara de Nord to 1 Mai. After many years of delays the next section to Parc Bazilescu was finally opened on 1 July 2011. Parc Bazilescu was not in the ...