Baku International Bus Terminal

Baku International Bus Terminal is a bus terminal located in Baku, Azerbaijan. The foundation stone for the complex was laid in 2004, and construction work was carried out by local firm "Baku 21st century". Baku International Bus Terminal was opened officially on 12 February 2009.[1] It is the biggest bus terminal in the Commonwealth of Independent States countries. Its design resembles a ship. It is located on Sumgait highway, in the entry to Baku city.

Baku international bus station

About the complex

The complex handles up to 950 bus movements every day across domestic and international routes, serving around 20,000 passengers. The terminal has four floors served by 14 escalators and 10 lifts. It also features a 93-bed hotel, 700-space car park, shopping mall of 800 shops, 500-seat canteen, bank, medical center, postal office, and waiting and VIP rooms. There is also a station supervisor's office and bus drivers` rest room facilities. The complex also has its own 35 kV auxiliary power station and five transformers.

Construction

Materials used during the construction as well as equipment installed here were delivered from Italy, Japan, Korea, Switzerland, France, Ukraine, Turkey, Iran, China, Russia, the United Arab Emirates, and India.

Subway station

Avtovağzal subway station opened on April 19, 2016.[2]

Design

The author of the design is Kamal Musakhanov, ARCON company.[3]

gollark: AE2 will just gobble up all your power and flicker on and off lots.
gollark: TE ones, at least, will run fine but at 1/5 speed.
gollark: Yes, but who's counting?
gollark: With sufficient batteries ANY machine can run on 4RF/t!
gollark: Admittedly they don't produce much.

References

  1. "Azerbaijani President opened one of biggest bus terminals of world". Archived from the original on 2011-10-03.
  2. Karimova, Aynur (19 April 2016). "Long-awaited subway stations open - UPDATE". Azernews. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  3. "PROJECT INTERNATIONAL BUS STATION". Archived from the original on 2011-09-04.

Official website

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.