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Salomó railway station

Railway stations in CataloniaRailway stations in Spain opened in 1883
Estació Salomó 2020
Estació Salomó 2020

Salomó is a railway station owned by ADIF located in the town of Salomó, in the Tarragonès region. The station is on the Barcelona-Vilanova-Valls railway line and is served by trains on the R13 line of Rodalies de Catalunya, operated by Renfe Operadora. This station entered service in 1883 when the section constructed by the Companyia dels Ferrocarrils de Valls a Vilanova i Barcelona (VVB) between Calafell and Valls was opened, one year after the opening of the line between Vilanova i la Geltrú and Calafell. In 2016 it recorded an entry of 2,000 passengers.

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

Salomó railway station
T-202,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Salomó railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.2234 ° E 1.3763 °
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Address

Salomó

T-202
43763
Catalonia, Spain
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Estació Salomó 2020
Estació Salomó 2020
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Nearby Places

Bonastre
Bonastre

Bonastre is a municipality in the comarca of the Baix Penedès in Catalonia, Spain. It is situated in the west of the comarca in the Quadrell range. Bonastre became part of the Baix Penedès in the comarcal revision of 1990: previously it formed part of the Tarragonès. In 1178, Bernat de Papiol, who was lord of the place, donated it to the Monastery of St Cugat. In 1382, King Pedro IV took possession of Bonastre for the crown although the monastery continued to govern the village until the 17th century. During the Trienio Liberal Bonastre supported the royalists. In 1822, the town was attacked by a party of militia and was left deserted as its inhabitants fled to the surrounding mountains. However, the militia were attacked by royalist troops when they left Bonastre and routed. The 19th-century parish church is dedicated to St Magdalene. It was built on the site of an ancient Romanesque temple which was destroyed in 1849. It consists of a single building covered by a cylindrical vault, with small interconnecting chapels at the side. The baptistry and sanctuary stand out. It was the work of a modernistic architect Josep Maria Jujol. Another notable building is a 19th-century house known as “can Fontanilles”. It has some interesting graphics on its façade, which include the arms of Bonastre and Catalonia The main festival at Bonastre takes place in July under the feast of St Magdalena. A local road links the village with Roda de Barà.