Iași railway station

Iași railway station is the main railway station in Iași, and one of the oldest in Romania. It is part of the Pan-European Corridor IX.

History
Opened in 1870, the Grand Railway Station first connected Iași to Chernivtsi in Bukovina, Austria-Hungary and, after two years, to Bucharest.

The original building designed by Julian Oktawian Zachariewicz-Lwigród and inspired by the Doge's Palace of the Republic of Venice, is 133.8 m long, has 113 rooms and is listed in the National Register of Historic Monuments.

In 1928-1930, two additional wings were symmetrically added to each side of the building. In 1980, a new separate building was constructed on the north side of the complex station and named Iași Nord.

The main buildings of the station have recently been restored with modern additions. -

Passenger services
As of 2013, Iași railway station serves about 110 trains in a typical day, including domestic trains to and from a majority of Romanian cities. Additionally, international trains run to Chișinău and Ungheni, in the Republic of Moldova.

The main lines in Iași are Făurei – Tecuci – Iași and Iași – Pașcani.

Local transit
The station is served by several tram and bus lines operated by CTP Iași, the local transit operator. Bus route 50 provides non-stop service to the Iași International Airport, with departures every 30 minutes.

Romania

 * Arad (via Oradea): 732 km
 * Bacău: 158 km
 * Baia Mare: 533 km
 * Brașov (via Buzău): 453 km
 * București: 406 km
 * Constanța: 430 km
 * Craiova: 631 km
 * Galați: 255 km
 * Oradea: 610 km
 * Suceava: 136 km
 * Timișoara (via Oradea): 788 km
 * Timișoara (via Deva): 847 km

Europe

 * Belgrad (via Cluj-Napoca): 966 km
 * Berlin: 1718 km
 * Budapest (via București): 1279 km
 * Budapest (via Cluj-Napoca): 858 km
 * Chișinău: 130 km
 * Frankfurt am Main: 1260 km
 * Kyiv (via Suceava): 916 km
 * Kyiv (via Bălți): 619 km
 * Sofia: 945 km
 * Venice: 1710 km
 * Vienna: 1130 km