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Çatal railway station

Bayındır DistrictRailway stations in Turkey opened in 1883Railway stations in İzmir ProvinceTurkish railway station stubsWikipedia page with obscure subdivision
Catal railway station
Catal railway station

Çatal station (Turkish: Çatal Garı) is a railway station on the Torbalı-Ödemiş railway, located in the district of Bayındır, Turkey. Çatal (English: Fork) is named for the junction just east of the station where the Çatal-Tire railway branches off.

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

Çatal railway station
Tire-Ödemiş yolu,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.172333333333 ° E 27.720694444444 °
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Address

Çatal Tren İstasyonu

Tire-Ödemiş yolu
35840
Turkey
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linkWikiData (Q28197498)
linkOpenStreetMap (191636190)

Catal railway station
Catal railway station
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Nearby Places

Tire, İzmir
Tire, İzmir

Tire (Ottoman Turkish: تيره; Greek: Θείρα, romanized: Theíra) is a municipality and district of İzmir Province, Turkey. Its area is 716 km2, and its population is 87,462 (2022). It is largely urbanized at the rate of 55.8%. Tire's center is situated at a distance of 80 km (50 mi) to the south-east from the point of departure of the traditional center of İzmir (Konak Square in Konak) and lies at a distance of 46 km (29 mi) inland from the nearest seacoast in the Gulf of Kuşadası to its west. Tire district area neighbors the district areas of Selçuk (west) Torbalı (north-west), Bayındır (north) and Ödemiş (east), all part of İzmir Province, while to the south it is bordered by Aydın Province. The district area's physical features are determined by the alluvial plain of Küçük Menderes River in its northern part and in its south by the mountains delimiting the parallel alluvial valley of Büyük Menderes River flowing between Aydın and the Aegean Sea. There is a Jewish community. Advantaged by its fertile soil and suitable climate, Tire district's economy largely relies on production and processing of agricultural products, especially of figs, cotton, corn and other grains, cash crops like tobacco and sesame, fruits like watermelons, cherries, peaches and grenadines and dry fruits like walnuts and chestnuts. Tire center has an attractive old quarter with many impressive examples of Islamic architecture, and lively Tuesday and Friday markets, where the influence of the multicultural population of the surrounding villages can be observed. These two markets on two days of the week are famous across the larger region and among visitors on excursion and tourists for the handcrafted items found on sale and they attract a large customer base. A yearly event that also draws crowds to Tire is one of the liveliest and the most rooted (since 1403) celebrations in western Turkey of Nevruz Day on the third Sunday of every March. A famous local speciality is Tire meatballs.