Agia Paraskevi metro station
0 sources
Agia Paraskevi metro station
Summary
Agia Paraskevi metro station is an Athens Metro station[1]. It draws 5 Wikipedia views per month (athens_metro_station category, ranking #16 of 57).[2]
Key Facts
- Agia Paraskevi metro station is located in Chalandri Municipality[3].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station is in the country of Greece[4].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's transport network is recorded as Athens Metro[5].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's image is recorded as Athens Metro Agia Paraskevi 2.jpg[6].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's instance of is recorded as Athens Metro station[7].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's instance of is recorded as underground station[8].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's connecting line is recorded as Athens Metro Line 3[9].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's operator is recorded as Urban Rail Transport S.A.[10].
- Agia Paraskevi Municipality is named after Agia Paraskevi metro station[11].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's adjacent station is recorded as Chalandri metro station[12].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's adjacent station is recorded as Nomismatokopio metro station[13].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's Commons category is recorded as Agia Paraskevi metro station[14].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 38.017222, 'lon': 23.8125}[15].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0n52x89[16].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's connecting service is recorded as Athens Metro Line 3[17].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's date of official opening is recorded as +2010-12-30T00:00:00Z[18].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's different from is recorded as Agia Paraskevi[19].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's BabelNet ID is recorded as 13806068n[20].
- Agia Paraskevi metro station's state of use is recorded as in use[21].
Why It Matters
Agia Paraskevi metro station draws 5 Wikipedia views per month (athens_metro_station category, ranking #16 of 57).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22]