High Speed 1
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High Speed 1
Summary
High Speed 1 is a high-speed railway line[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of high_speed_railway_line entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (916 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- High Speed 1 is located in Greater London[3].
- High Speed 1 is located in Essex[4].
- High Speed 1 is located in Kent[5].
- High Speed 1 is located in South East England[6].
- High Speed 1 is in the country of United Kingdom[7].
- High Speed 1's route map is recorded as High Speed 1 CTRL.png[8].
- High Speed 1's image is recorded as Eurostar on Channel Tunnel Rail Link.jpg[9].
- High Speed 1's instance of is recorded as high-speed railway line[10].
- High Speed 1's instance of is recorded as transport megaproject[11].
- High Speed 1's instance of is recorded as public transport[12].
- High Speed 1's owned by is recorded as Government of the United Kingdom[13].
- High Speed 1's operator is recorded as DB Cargo UK[14].
- High Speed 1's operator is recorded as Southeastern[15].
- High Speed 1's operator is recorded as Eurostar[16].
- High Speed 1's logo image is recorded as National Rail logo.svg[17].
- High Speed 1's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 219981708[18].
- High Speed 1's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as nb2011030260[19].
- High Speed 1's part of is recorded as National Rail[20].
- High Speed 1's part of is recorded as high-speed rail in the United Kingdom[21].
- High Speed 1's Commons category is recorded as High Speed 1[22].
- High Speed 1's OpenStreetMap relation ID is recorded as 2236601[23].
- High Speed 1's Structurae structure ID is recorded as 10000038[24].
- High Speed 1's has part is recorded as St Pancras to Cheriton (Channel Tunnel Rail Link), Dagenham Junction to Eurotunnel boundary[25].
- High Speed 1's terminus is recorded as St Pancras railway station[26].
- High Speed 1's terminus is recorded as Channel Tunnel[27].
Why It Matters
High Speed 1 ranks in the top 6% of high_speed_railway_line entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (916 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]