Xuzhouxincun station

Xuzhouxincun (Chinese: 徐州新村) is a station on Line 1 of Wuhan Metro, opened along with the completion of Line 1, Phase 2 on July 29, 2010.[1] It is an elevated station situated on Jiefang Avenue, with proximity to Erqi Yangtze River Bridge, Wuhan Erqi Memorial Hall, and downtown bus transfers. The station has two side platforms serving trains from each direction.

Xuzhouxincun

徐州新村
LocationJiang'an District, Wuhan, Hubei
China
Coordinates30°37′50″N 114°19′22″E
Operated byWuhan Metro Co., Ltd
Line(s)     Line 1
Platforms2 (2 side platforms)
History
OpenedJuly 29, 2010
Services
Preceding station   Wuhan Metro   Following station
toward Jinghe
Line 1
toward Hankou North

Station layout

3F
Side platform, doors open on the right
Westbound      Line 1 towards Jinghe (Erqi Road)
Eastbound      Line 1 towards Hankou North (Danshuichi)
Side platform, doors open on the right
2F Concourse Faregates, Station Agent
G Entrances and Exits Exits A, B

Facilities

Xuzhouxincun Station is a three-story elevated station built entirely along Jiefang Avenue. The station is equipped with attended customer service concierges, automatic ticket vending machines, accessible lifts, and restrooms in fared zone.

Exits

There are currently two exits in service:

  • Exit A: Jiefang Avenue, accessible to Zhongbai Cangchu Erqi Shopping Center
  • Exit B: Jiefang Avenue, accessible to Xincunjie Community Clinic and Wuhan Erqi Memorial Hall.

Transfers

Bus transfers to Route 3, 4, 211, 212, 232, 234, 509, 577, 615, 727, 809, Trolleybus Route 3 and 4 are available at Xuzhouxincun Station.[2]

gollark: Not really. Regular people can buy stocks. Probably only large companies are doing HFT, though.
gollark: Apparently finance might be an application for it, since fibre optics are somewhat significantly slower than light, and the satellites' laser/microwave links wouldn't be, and the minor latency advantage would provide an edge in high frequency trading.
gollark: Wokerer: modulate some kind of neutrino generation thing, and have a detector on the other end, so you can just send signals straight through the earth.
gollark: Really? That would be better, then.
gollark: I do wonder how well they're actually going to work in practice, though. I heard that each satellite could handle 6Gbps or so of traffic, and there are maybe 500 of them, which means if they roll it out to 100 000 people they'll get an amazing 4MB/s each.

References

  1. "武汉轻轨1号线全线运营". Xinhuanet. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  2. "武汉公交查询". Retrieved 18 December 2013.


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