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Rodange railway station

Luxembourgian railway station stubsRailway stations in PétangeRailway stations on CFL Line 70Railway stations on CFL Line 80
GareRodange
GareRodange

Rodange railway station (Luxembourgish: Gare Rodange, French: Gare de Rodange, German: Bahnhof Rodingen) is a railway station serving Rodange, in the commune of Pétange, in south-western Luxembourg. It is operated by Chemins de Fer Luxembourgeois, the state-owned railway company, and served by both CFL trains and those of the Belgian state operator, NMBS/SNCB. The station is situated on Line 70, which connects the south-west of the country to Luxembourg City; at Rodange, the line branches, and connects to both the Belgian town of Athus and the French town of Longuyon (via Longwy). It is also located on Line 80, and is the only Luxembourgian station served by that line.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Rodange railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Rodange railway station
Route de Luxembourg,

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Wikipedia: Rodange railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 49.550833333333 ° E 5.8433333333333 °
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Address

Gare CFL de Rodange

Route de Luxembourg 20
4833
Luxembourg
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GareRodange
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Nearby Places

Belgium–France border
Belgium–France border

The Belgium–France border, or more commonly the Franco-Belgian border, separates France and Belgium and is 620 km (390 mi) long. Part of it is defined by the Lys river. The western end is at the North Sea (51°5′22″N 2°32′43″E near De Panne and Bray-Dunes). The eastern end is at the Belgium–France–Luxembourg tripoint (at 49°32′46″N 5°49′5″E near Athus and Mont-Saint-Martin). The straight distance between these points is 289 km (180 mi). Since 1995 Belgium and France have been parts of the Schengen Area. This means there are no permanent border controls at this border, but there have been temporary controls. The Belgian side of the border is shared by, from north to south, the provinces of West Flanders (Flemish Region) and Hainaut, Namur and Luxembourg (Walloon Region). The French side of the border is shared by, from north to south, the departments of Nord and Aisne (region of Hauts-de-France) and Ardennes, Meuse and Meurthe-et-Moselle (region of Grand Est). The limits of the border are outlined in the 1820 Treaty of Kortrijk, agreed between France and the then-United Kingdom of the Netherlands. Belgium inherited the border upon its independence, which consists of a number of border posts. Maintenance of and disputes concerning the border are managed by a mixed Franco-Belgian border delimitation commission, which is convened when required. A commission was convened in 2000 concerning the maintenance of the border posts between France and the Belgian province of West Flanders.On 4 May 2021, a Belgian farmer moved one of the border posts which was in the path of his tractor, inadvertently shifting the Belgian border approximately 2.2 m (7.2 ft) into France.