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Roads in Romania. Highways. ← A 2. → A 4. 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. It will be 596 km long and will run along the route: Ploiești, Brașov, Făgăraș, Sighișoara, Târgu Mureș ...
RATBV. Location. Brașov, Romania. Website. www .ratbv .ro. RATBV S.A., formerly Regia Autonomă de Transport Brașov (English: Autonomous Transportation Board of Brașov ), and commonly referred to as RAT Brașov, is the only public transport operator in the city of Brașov, Romania.
1957. Bucharest. 44°28′51″N 26°04′17″E / . 44.48090°N 26.07126°E. / 44.48090; 26.07126. Tallest building in Bucharest between 1957 and 2007 and in the entire country from 1957 and 1984. Former headquarter of the communist newspaper Scînteia and the Bucharest Stock Exchange. [8] Administrative Palace.
Cluj-Napoca ( Romanian: [ˈkluʒ naˈpoka] ⓘ ), or simply Cluj ( Hungarian: Kolozsvár [ˈkoloʒvaːr] ⓘ, German: Klausenburg ), is the second-most populous city in Romania [5] and the seat of Cluj County in the northwestern part of the country. Geographically, it is roughly equidistant from Bucharest (445 kilometres (277 miles)), Budapest ...
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The Cluj-Napoca Metro is an underground rapid-transit system under construction in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. When opened, it will become Romania's second mass transit network after the Bucharest Metro. The system is of light metro type with a transport capacity of around 15,200–21,600 passengers per hour per direction. [2]
The history of Cluj-Napoca covers the time from the Roman conquest of Dacia, when a Roman settlement named Napoca existed on the location of the later city, through the founding of Cluj and its flourishing as the main cultural and religious center in the historical province of Transylvania, until its modern existence as a city, the seat of Cluj County in north-western Romania.