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DN1 (Romanian: Drumul Național 1) is an important national road in Romania which links Bucharest with the northwestern part of the country and the border with Hungary via Borș. The main cities linked by DN1 are Bucharest, Ploiești , Brașov , Sibiu , Alba Iulia , Cluj-Napoca and Oradea .
Bucharest–Ploiești (62.79 km), Râșnov–Brașov (6.30 km), Târgu Mureș–Nădășelu (113 km), Nușfalău - Suplacu de Barcău (13.554 km) and Oradea–Borș (5.35 km) sectors are operational. The exits to DN73 at Cristian (3.56 km) and DN15 at Târgu Mureș (4.70 km), although not part of A3, are built to expressway standards.
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.
In total, the network is 80.1 km (49.8 mi) long and has 64 stations, [1] with 1.5 km (0.9 mi) average distance between stops. It is one of the fastest ways to get around the city. The oldest metro line is M1, which was opened in 1979. [2] The newest metro line is M5, which was opened in 2020. [3]
As of October 2015, section 1 (4.0 km) [33] and section 5 (6.3 km, plus a connecting road) [17] at the ends of the Comarnic – Brașov section were separately tendered. For section 1, a bid by Spedition UMB and Tehnostrade remained the only one, while the other tender was leaning towards a consortium led by the Spanish construction company Copisa.
The first routes were Bucharest – Sibiu – Arad and Bucharest – Sibiu – Oradea. In 1944, Sibiu was connected by air with some other cities like Bucharest, Brasov, Deva, Oradea and Targu-Mures. In 1959, it was inaugurated the airport building with two floors, a control tower, a waiting room for 50 passengers on each way (embarking and ...
6 2019–2020 4 2023– 1 (5 more contracted) Imperio Cluj 2020–2021 24 Imperio Oradea 2020–2021 20 2025– 6 more ordered [9] Autentic Galați Image: 2021 8 2025– 10 more ordered [10] Imperio Civitas 2021–2024 18 Imperio Metropolitan 2022–2024 100 [11] Imperio Brăila Image: 2023–present 2 (6 more ordered + 2 contracted) [12] [13 ...
The current logo was adopted once with the company name change in 2018, whilst the old RATB logo has its origins in 1983, when the new ITB logo was adopted. [6] With the reception of new Astra Imperio Metropolitan trams starting from 2022, STB rolling stock transitioned to a green colour scheme which has been applied on all newly delivered STB ...