Transport in Hungary

1887

A part of this route is the same as where electric trams made their world first run in 1887.

1896

Its line 1 (opened in 1896) is the oldest electrified underground railway on the European continent.

1970

The second (red) line was opened in 1970, third (blue) line was opened in 1976, the newest line is the fourth (green), it was opened in 2014. ===Trams=== The busiest traditional city tram line in the world is still route 4/6 in Budapest, where 50-meter long trams run at 120 to 180 second intervals at peak time and are usually packed with people.

These lines were closed in the 1970s. === Trolleybus === Trolleybuses can be found in three cities: Budapest, Debrecen and Szeged. ==Pipelines== Crude oil: 1,204 km Natural gas: 4,387 km (1991) ==See also== Hungary Hungarian State Railways List of airports in Hungary List of motorways in Hungary Suburban railway lines in Budapest ==References== == External links == Public Transport and Railways in Hungary

1976

The second (red) line was opened in 1970, third (blue) line was opened in 1976, the newest line is the fourth (green), it was opened in 2014. ===Trams=== The busiest traditional city tram line in the world is still route 4/6 in Budapest, where 50-meter long trams run at 120 to 180 second intervals at peak time and are usually packed with people.

2009

They also provided local transport in cities and towns that did not have their own public transport company (all cities except for Budapest, Miskolc, Pécs, Kaposvár and also Debrecen after 2009), and operated bus lines in cities where the local company operated only tram and trolley bus lines (Szeged and Debrecen, the latter until 2009, when DKV took over the bus lines).

2014

The second (red) line was opened in 1970, third (blue) line was opened in 1976, the newest line is the fourth (green), it was opened in 2014. ===Trams=== The busiest traditional city tram line in the world is still route 4/6 in Budapest, where 50-meter long trams run at 120 to 180 second intervals at peak time and are usually packed with people.

2015

In early 2015 the 24 companies were organized into seven regional companies. ==Railways== Note: Hungary and Austria jointly manage the cross-border standard-gauge railway between Győr–Sopron–Ebenfurt (GySEV/ROeEE), a distance of about 101 km in Hungary and 65 km in Austria. In Budapest, the three main railway stations are the Eastern (Keleti), Western (Nyugati) and Southern (Déli), with other outlying stations like Kelenföld.

The five international airports are Budapest-Liszt Ferenc, Debrecen Airport, Hévíz–Balaton International Airport (previously Sármellék, also called FlyBalaton for its proximity to Lake Balaton, Hungary's number one tourist attraction), Győr-Pér and Pécs-Pogány (as of 2015.




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Page generated on 2021-08-05