place

Malešice

Districts of PraguePrague geography stubs
V úžlabině, Plaňanská, ByTy Malešice
V úžlabině, Plaňanská, ByTy Malešice

Malešice is a cadastral district in Prague. It has population of approximately 10,000. The earliest reference about the village is from 1309. It became part of Prague on 1 January 1922. It lies mostly in the municipal and administrative district of Prague 10 while a small part is in Prague 9. The district is bordered by Strašnice, Žižkov, Hrdlořezy, Kyje, Štěrboholy and Hostivař.

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

Malešice
U Tvrze, Prague Malešice

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: MalešiceContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.085 ° E 14.511111111111 °
placeShow on map

Address

NS sv. Josefa - 9. Malešické náměstí

U Tvrze
108 00 Prague, Malešice
Prague, Czechia
mapOpen on Google Maps

V úžlabině, Plaňanská, ByTy Malešice
V úžlabině, Plaňanská, ByTy Malešice
Share experience

Nearby Places

Praha-Libeň railway station
Praha-Libeň railway station

Praha-Libeň railway station (Czech: Nádraží Praha-Libeň) is a mainline railway station located in the Libeň district of Prague 9. It is situated on Line 11, which links Prague to Český Brod and Kolín as well as forming part of the main railway corridor connecting the Czech capital to Brno and Olomouc. Since reconstruction of the station, which took place between 2008 and 2010 as part of the Nové Spojení project, a number of international services running to and from the more central Praha hlavní nádraží now also call here. In addition to its passenger handling facilities (the station was used by 876,000 passengers in 2006) the Praha-Libeň station area is also home to a large freight yard and is an important centre for services operated by ČD Cargo. The line from Olomouc to Prague, as first opened in 1845, passed through what was then the village of Libeň, but it was not until 1877 that a station was built – between the stations then named Praha statní nádraží (today's Masarykovo nádraží) and Běchovice – to serve the locality. In 1923 Libeň station was renamed Libeň horní nádraží (Libeň high-level station) to distinguish it from the low-level station (dolní nádraží) which led to the now demolished terminus at Těšnov. In 1926 a cut-and-cover line was built under Vítkov hill linking Libeň station to Praha hlavní nádraží. In the late 1970s the station was modernised and shortly afterwards a new link was built to Praha-Holešovice railway station, intended to serve the international services which the two central stations no longer had the capacity to handle.The station is situated within walking distance of the O2 Arena, and thus played a key role in the infrastructure provided for the 2004 IIHF World Championship. Libeň station is not connected to the Prague Metro, but is served by buses and trams operating as part of the city's public transport system.