Atanasio G. Sarabia
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Atanasio G. Sarabia
Summary
Atanasio G. Sarabia is a bus stop[1].
Key Facts
- Atanasio G. Sarabia is located in Iztapalapa[2].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia is in the country of Mexico[3].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's transport network is recorded as Metrobús[4].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's image is recorded as Metrobús Atanasio G. Sarabia (2024) 2.jpg[5].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's instance of is recorded as bus stop[6].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's connecting line is recorded as Line 5[7].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's owned by is recorded as Government of Mexico City[8].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's operator is recorded as Metrobús[9].
- Atanasio G. Saravia is named after Atanasio G. Sarabia[10].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's logo image is recorded as Metrobús Atanasio G. Sarabia (logo).png[11].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's adjacent station is recorded as Escuadrón 201[12].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's adjacent station is recorded as Ermita Iztapalapa[13].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's part of is recorded as Line 5[14].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's Commons category is recorded as Estación Atanasio G. Sarabia (Metrobús)[15].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 19.361309, 'longitude': -99.110277, 'precision': 1e-06}[16].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's IPA transcription is recorded as [atanaˈsjo xe saˈɾaβja][17].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's date of official opening is recorded as +2020-09-07T00:00:00Z[18].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's place name sign is recorded as Metrobús Atanasio G. Sarabia (2024) 5.jpg[19].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's state of use is recorded as in use[20].
- Atanasio G. Sarabia's image of entrance is recorded as Metrobús Atanasio G. Sarabia (2024) 6.jpg[21].
Body
Geography
Atanasio G. Sarabia is in the country of Mexico[3]. It is located in Iztapalapa[2]. Its part of is recorded as Line 5[14].
Designation and Status
Atanasio G. Sarabia's instance of is recorded as bus stop[6].
History and Context
Atanasio G. Sarabia's owned by is recorded as Government of Mexico City[8]. Atanasio G. Saravia is named after it[10].