Cluj-Napoca railway station
Preceding station | CFR | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Huedin towards Oradea | CFR Intercity 300 | Câmpia Turzii towards București Nord |
![Map](https://maps.wikimedia.org/img/osm-intl,15,a,a,270x200.png?lang=en&domain=en.wikipedia.org&title=Cluj-Napoca_railway_station&revid=1184658241&groups=_4783ce303813de7bdb1600db07fcda29e21ef961)
Location | |
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![]() ![]() Cluj-Napoca Location in Romania Show map of Romania![]() ![]() Cluj-Napoca Location in Europe Show map of Europe |
Cluj-Napoca train station is the main railway station in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. It is located near the city center.
History
Two plaques on the building commemorate the 100th and 125th anniversary of the opening of the station on September 7, 1870.[1] The Cluj-Napoca railway station was designed and built by Hungarian architect Ferenc Pfaff,[2] when the city was part of Kingdom of Hungary, Austro-Hungarian Empire.
Current situation
The station is situated on the Căile Ferate Române line 300 Bucharest–Ploiești–Brașov–Teiuș–Cluj-Napoca–Oradea–Episcopia Bihor and the line Cluj-Napoca–Dej–Ilva Mică. As of 2008[update], Cluj-Napoca railway station serves about 100 passenger trains, including domestic trains operated by Căile Ferate Române. Cluj-Napoca offers connections with the majority of Romanian cities, as well as service to Budapest, Hungary and Vienna, Austria.
Distance from other railway stations
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/49/Train_in_Cluj.jpg/250px-Train_in_Cluj.jpg)
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/af/140_class_loco_at_Cluj%2C_1972.jpg/250px-140_class_loco_at_Cluj%2C_1972.jpg)
City | Country | km | Route |
---|---|---|---|
București Nord | Romania | 0,497 | |
Arad | Romania | 0,332 | via Alba Iulia |
Arad | Romania | 0,279 | via Oradea |
Brașov | Romania | 0,331 | |
Constanța | Romania | 0,722 | via București Nord |
Constanța | Romania | 0,718 | via Buzău |
Craiova | Romania | 0,375 | via Târgu Jiu |
Galați | Romania | 0,641 | via Brașov |
Galați | Romania | 0,654 | via Bacău, Suceava |
Iași | Romania | 0,458 | |
Oradea | Romania | 0,152 | |
Satu Mare | Romania | 0,252 | via Baia Mare |
Satu Mare | Romania | 0,285 | via Oradea |
Suceava | Romania | 0,322 | |
Timișoara Nord | Romania | 0,330 | via Oradea |
Timișoara Nord | Romania | 0,389 | via Deva |
Belgrade | Serbia | 0,508 | |
Berlin | Germany | 1,260 | |
Budapest | Hungary | 0,400 | |
Chișinău | Moldova | 0,588 | |
Frankfurt am Main | Germany | 1,259 | |
Kyiv | Ukraine | 1,116 | via Suceava |
Sofia | Bulgaria | 1,033 | via București Nord |
Venice | Italy | 1,252 | |
Vienna | Austria | 0,672 |
References
External links
Media related to Cluj-Napoca train station at Wikimedia Commons
- Trains timetable