Main National Rail Lines
Preceding station | NMBS/SNCB | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Brussels-Central toward Oostende | IC A | Leuven toward Eupen | ||
Brussels-Central toward Blankenberge and Knokke | IC E | Leuven Only from monday to friday, except holidays toward Tongeren | ||
Leuven On weekends and holidays toward Liège and Genk | ||||
Brussels-Central toward Quievrain | IC F | Leuven toward Liège-Guillemins | ||
Brussels-Central toward Mouscron | IC H | Schaarbeek Terminus | ||
Brussels-Central toward Charleroi-Sud | IC I | Mechelen toward Antwerpen-Centraal | ||
Brussels-Central toward Bruxelles-Midi / Brussel-Zuid | IC J IC "des Ardennes" & Luxembourg | Bruxelles-Schuman toward Luxembourg | ||
Brussels-Central toward Gent-Sint-Pieters | IC K | Leuven toward Genk | ||
Brussels-Central toward Bruxelles-Midi / Brussel-Zuid | IC M | Brussels-Schuman toward Dinant and Liers | ||
Brussels-Central toward Charleroi-Sud | IC N | Mechelen toward Essen | ||
Brussels-Central toward Bruxelles-Midi / Brussel-Zuid | IC O | Liège-Guillemins toward Visé | ||
IC R | Vilvoorde toward Turnhout | |||
Brussels-Central toward Nivelles | IR b | Vilvoorde toward Antwerpen-Centraal | ||
Brussels-Central toward Courtrai and Grammont | IR d | |||
Brussels-Central toward Gent-Sint-Pieters | IR h | Zaventem toward Brussels National Airport | ||
Brussels-Central From monday to friday, except holidays toward De Panne | IR i | Brussels National Airport From monday to friday, except holidays toward Mechelen | ||
Brussels-Central On weekends and holidays toward De Panne | Terminus | |||
Brussels-Central toward Quevy | IR j | Brussels National Airport Terminus | ||
Brussels-Central toward Binche | IR l | Brussels-Schuman toward Louvain-la-Neuve-Université | ||
Brussels-Central toward Bruxelles-Midi / Brussel-Zuid | IR n | Vilvoorde toward Antwerpen-Centraal | ||
IR o | Brussels National Airport toward Leuven |
Read more about this topic: Brussels-North Railway Station, Rail Lines
Other articles related to "national":
... is a poem by the Slovene Romantic poet France Prešeren, considered the national poet of Slovenes ... On 27 September 1989, it became the national anthem of Slovenia ... of the idea of a united Slovenia, which the March Revolution in 1848 elevated into a national political programme ...
... become a four brigade combat team division with National Guardsmen from throughout the Pacific/Western United States and Oceania ... in World War I as a depot division, it was reorganised as the National Guard division for California, Nevada, and Utah, before seeing service in the Pacific Theatre of World War II ... The division was redesignated the National Guard unit for California alone, and it continues to serve domestically as such, mostly in homeland security operations ...
... Instead of October 3, the National Reunification should be celebrated on the first Sunday of October ... for an increased working hours would be seen as a provocation and devaluing the national holiday. 7 October, which happens to have been the national day of East Germany this date would thus have been seen as commemorating the division of Germany rather than ...
... These national bodies are the rule-making body for that nation ... For example the British Orienteering Federation is the national governing body for the United Kingdom ...
Famous quotes containing the words lines, rail, main and/or national:
“We stand in the tumult of a festival.
What festival? This loud, disordered mooch?
These hospitaliers? These brute-like guests?
These musicians dubbing at a tragedy,
A-dub, a-dub, which is made up of this:
That there are no lines to speak? There is no play.”
—Wallace Stevens (18791955)
“We rail at trade, but the historian of the world will see that it was the principle of liberty; that it settled America, and destroyed feudalism, and made peace and keeps peace; that it will abolish slavery.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“Many women are reluctant to allow men to enter their domain. They dont want men to acquire skills in what has traditionally been their area of competence and one of their main sources of self-esteem. So while they complain about the males unwillingness to share in domestic duties, they continually push the male out when he moves too confidently into what has previously been their exclusive world.”
—Bettina Arndt (20th century)
“Being a gentleman is the number one priority, the chief question integral to our national life.”
—Edward Fox (b. 1934)