Skogn station
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Skogn station
Summary
Skogn station is a cultural property[1]. It ranks in the top 6% of cultural_property entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Skogn station is located in Levanger Municipality[3].
- Skogn station is in the country of Norway[4].
- Skogn station's transport network is recorded as Trøndelag Commuter Rail[5].
- Skogn station's image is recorded as Skogn stasjon 2.jpg[6].
- Skogn station's instance of is recorded as cultural property[7].
- Skogn station's instance of is recorded as railway station[8].
- Skogn station's connecting line is recorded as Nordland Line[9].
- Skogn station's connecting line is recorded as Stjørdal–Levanger railway line[10].
- Skogn station's architect is recorded as Paul Due[11].
- Skogn station's owned by is recorded as Jernbaneverket[12].
- Skogn station's owned by is recorded as Bane NOR Eiendom[13].
- Skogn station's operator is recorded as Vy[14].
- Skogn station's architectural style is recorded as Art Nouveau architecture[15].
- Skogn station's adjacent station is recorded as Ronglan station[16].
- Skogn station's adjacent station is recorded as Levanger station[17].
- Skogn station's Commons category is recorded as Skogn stasjon[18].
- Skogn station's located in time zone is recorded as Central European Time[19].
- Skogn station's located in time zone is recorded as Central European Summer Time[20].
- +1902-10-29T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Skogn station[21].
- Skogn station's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 63.705057, 'lon': 11.194286}[22].
- Skogn station's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03mh9pw[23].
- Skogn station's UIC station code is recorded as 7601305[24].
- Skogn station's Kulturminne ID is recorded as 87668[25].
- Skogn station's located on linear feature is recorded as Nordland Line[26].
- Skogn station's IBNR ID is recorded as 7600256[27].
Why It Matters
Skogn station ranks in the top 6% of cultural_property entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (3 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]