About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 41. Chapters: Nuremberg S-Bahn, Nuremberg U-Bahn, Nurnberg Hauptbahnhof, Nuremberg Airport, Nuremberg-Augsburg railway, Nuremberg-Cheb railway, Nuremberg-Wurzburg railway, Nuremberg-Schwandorf railway, Nuremberg Transport Museum, Nuremberg-Regensburg railway, Nuremberg-Bamberg railway, Nuremberg-Munich high-speed railway, Bavarian Ludwig Railway, Grafenberg Railway, Furth Hauptbahnhof, List of Nuremberg U-Bahn stations, U1, Weisser Turm, U2, U3, Nurnberg Nordost station, Plarrer, Rathaus, Aufsessplatz, Hohe Marter, Eberhardshof, Wohrder Wiese, Gostenhof, Barenschanze, Messe, Rathenauplatz, Opernhaus, Rennweg, Flughafen, Langwasser Sud, Hasenbuck, Rothenburger Strasse, Lorenzkirche, Ziegelstein, Sundersbuhl, Jakobinenstrasse, Herrnhutte, Schweinau, Klinikum, Rothenbach, Gemeinschaftshaus, Langwasser Mitte, Scharfreiterring, Maximilianstrasse, Gustav-Adolf-Strasse, Bauernfeindstrasse, St. Leonhard, Frankenstrasse, Maffeiplatz, Langwasser Nord, Schoppershof, Hardhohe, Stadthalle, Muggenhof, Maxfeld, Stadtgrenze, Friedrich-Ebert-Platz, Kaulbachplatz. Excerpt: The Nuremberg U-Bahn is a metro run by VAG Nurnberg (Verkehrsaktiengesellschaft Nurnberg or Nuremberg Transport Corporation), which itself is a member of the VGN (Verkehrsverbund Grossraum Nurnberg or Greater Nuremberg Transport Network). The Nuremberg U-Bahn is Germany's newest metro. Its DT1 vehicles are largely the same design as the A cars found on the Munich U-Bahn, and both transport companies once lent each other trainsets as reserve rolling stock for major events (such as the Munich Olympics) at the time when both systems were quite new. Such swaps are now no longer possible, as the rolling stock on each system has developed in ways that would require it to undergo modification for use on the other system. The newer Nuremberg trains (the DT2, for example) are incompatible w