Porta Venezia
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Porta Venezia
Summary
Porta Venezia is a metro station[1]. It ranks in the top 2% of metro_station entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (9 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Porta Venezia is located in Milan[3].
- Porta Venezia is in the country of Italy[4].
- Porta Venezia's transport network is recorded as Milan Metro[5].
- Porta Venezia's image is recorded as Milano - stazione metropolitana Porta Venezia - banchina.jpg[6].
- Porta Venezia's continent is recorded as Europe[7].
- Porta Venezia's instance of is recorded as metro station[8].
- Porta Venezia's instance of is recorded as underground station[9].
- Porta Venezia's connecting line is recorded as Milan Metro Line 1[10].
- Porta Venezia's maintained by is recorded as ATM[11].
- Porta Venezia's operator is recorded as ATM[12].
- Porta Venezia is named after Porta Venezia[13].
- Porta Venezia's main building contractor is recorded as MM[14].
- Porta Venezia's adjacent station is recorded as Palestro[15].
- Porta Venezia's adjacent station is recorded as Lima[16].
- Porta Venezia's Commons category is recorded as Porta Venezia station (Milan metro)[17].
- Porta Venezia's Structurae structure ID is recorded as 20059976[18].
- +1964-11-01T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Porta Venezia[19].
- Porta Venezia's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 45.475315, 'lon': 9.205899}[20].
- Porta Venezia's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0bh9976[21].
- Porta Venezia's interchange station is recorded as Milano Porta Venezia railway halt[22].
- Porta Venezia's interchange station is recorded as Q135660992[23].
- Porta Venezia's number of platform tracks is recorded as {'amount': '+2'}[24].
- Porta Venezia's date of official opening is recorded as +1964-11-01T00:00:00Z[25].
- Porta Venezia's BabelNet ID is recorded as 02009709n[26].
- Porta Venezia's disabled accessibility is recorded as wheelchair accessible[27].
Why It Matters
Porta Venezia ranks in the top 2% of metro_station entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (9 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]