Ruse Central railway station

Ruse Central railway station (Bulgarian: Централна железопътна гара Русе, romanized: Tsentralna zhelezopatna gara Ruse) is the main station serving the city and municipality of Ruse, the fifth most populous city in Bulgaria. After the opening of the Danube Bridge in 1954, a new grand Stalinist Central Railway Station was envisioned for the city of Ruse. The new station opened in late 1955 temporarily becoming the biggest on the Balkan peninsula featuring three platforms, with four tracks and one passing track.

Inside the station
Ruse Central
The Ruse station sign.
Location1 Aleksandar Stamboliyski Sq. Ruse, Bulgaria
Coordinates43°49′58″N 25°57′18″E
Owned byNRIC
Platforms3
Tracks4
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
Platform levels2
ParkingYes
History
Opened1955
Electrified1963

It is a transport hub, with trains to Gorna Oryahovitsa (mostly), to Sofia, Varna, Samuil, and Burgas seasonally, as well as Bucharest and Istanbul internationally. The station serves as a border checkpoint for trains crossing into Romania, via the Danube Bridge.

See also

Media related to Rousse Central Train Station at Wikimedia Commons


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