Nagyvárad tér metro station
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Nagyvárad tér | |||||||||||
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Budapest Metro station | |||||||||||
File:After the renovation of the Nagyvárad tér metro station in 2023.jpg | |||||||||||
General information | |||||||||||
Location | Budapest Hungary | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 47°28′45″N 19°05′20″E / 47.47911°N 19.08899°E | ||||||||||
Platforms | 1 island platform | ||||||||||
Construction | |||||||||||
Structure type | cut-and-cover underground | ||||||||||
Depth | 7.06 m | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened | 31 December 1976[1] | ||||||||||
Closed | 14 May 2022 | ||||||||||
Rebuilt | 22 May 2023 | ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
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Nagyvárad tér is a station on the M3 (blue) line of the Budapest Metro. The area around the station is home to several hospitals and the Semmelweis University medical school. The station is named after the adjacent square Nagyvárad tér, which named after the former Hungarian city of Nagyvárad (now, Oradea, Romania). The station was opened on 31 December 1976 as the southern terminus of the inaugural section of Line M3 between Deák Ferenc tér and Nagyvárad tér. On 20 April 1980 the line was extended to Kőbánya-Kispest.[2]
Connections
- Bus: 281
- Tram: 23, 24
References
- Budapest City Atlas, Dimap-Szarvas, Budapest, 2011, ISBN 978-963-03-9124-5
- ↑ Ágnes Medveczky Kovácsyné: 25 éves a budapesti metró ("Budapest Metro is 25 years old"), BKV, Budapest, 1995
- ↑ Schwandl, Robert. "Budapest". urbanrail.
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