Petőfi Bridge
Petőfi híd or Petőfi Bridge is a bridge in Budapest, connecting Pest and Buda across the Danube. It is the second southernmost public bridge in Budapest.Photo: OsvátA, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Places of Interest Nearby
Highlights include Museum of Applied Arts and Great Market Hall.
Museum of Applied Arts
Museum
Photo: Wikimedia, Public domain.
The Museum of Applied Arts is a museum in Budapest, Hungary. It is the third-oldest applied arts museum in the world. It was established by the Hungarian Parliament in 1872 to collect applied artworks, historical and contemporary, from Hungary and around the world. Museum of Applied Arts is situated 1 km northeast of Petőfi Bridge.
Great Market Hall
Marketplace
Photo: Fred Romero, CC BY 2.0.
The Great Market Hall or Central Market Hall, Market Hall I is the largest and oldest indoor market in Budapest, Hungary. The idea of building such a large market hall arose from the first mayor of Budapest, Károly Kamermayer, and it was his largest investment. Great Market Hall is situated 1 km north of Petőfi Bridge.
National Theatre
Theater building
Photo: Yelkrokoyade, CC BY-SA 3.0.
The National Theatre, located in Budapest originally opened in 1837. Since then, it has occupied several locations, including the original building at Kerepesi Street, the People's Theatre at Blaha Lujza Square, as well as Hevesi Sándor Square, its longest temporary location. National Theatre is situated 1 km southeast of Petőfi Bridge.
Places in the Area
Nearby places include Infopark and Budapest’s Palace District.
Infopark
Neighborhood
Photo: Jeti wiki, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Infopark is a collective name given to a high tech, mainly research and development focused business district in the Budapest, focused on software, electronics, and telecommunication, finance, business consulting located in Budapest's District XI on the bank of Danube.
Budapest’s Palace District
Suburb
Budapest's Palotanegyed forms an inner part of Pest, the eastern half of Budapest. Known until the communist period as the ‘Magnates’ Quarter’, it consists of the most westerly part of the city's Eighth District, or Józsefváros, which was named on 7 November 1777 after Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor and Archduke of Austria, who reigned 1765-1790.
Petőfi Bridge
- Type: Bridge
- Description: bridge in Budapest, Hungary
- Categories: road bridge, truss bridge, and transportation
- Location: Budapest, Central Hungary, Hungary, Central Europe, Europe
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
47.47891° or 47° 28′ 44″ northLongitude
19.06355° or 19° 3′ 49″ eastOpen location code
8FVXF3H7+HCOpenStreetMap ID
way 138015171OpenStreetMap feature
man_made=bridgeWikidata ID
Q781659
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikipedia.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Petőfi Bridge from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Bulgarian to Vietnamese—“Petőfi Bridge” goes by many names.
- Bulgarian: “Петьофи (мост)”
- Bulgarian: “Петьофи”
- Chinese: “裴多菲桥”
- Croatian: “Petőfijev most”
- Czech: “Most Petőfi”
- Czech: “Petőfi híd”
- Czech: “Petőfiho most”
- Dutch: “Petofibrug”
- Dutch: “Petőfibrug”
- Esperanto: “Petőfi-ponto”
- Finnish: “Petőfin silta”
- French: “pont Petőfi”
- French: “Pont Petőfi”
- German: “Petőfibrücke”
- Hebrew: “גשר פטפי”
- Hungarian: “Petőfi híd”
- Indonesian: “Jembatan Petőfi”
- Italian: “Ponte Petőfi”
- Japanese: “ペテーフィ橋”
- Korean: “페퇴피 다리”
- Korean: “페퇴피교”
- Persian: “پل پتوفی”
- Polish: “Most Petőfiego w Budapeszcie”
- Romanian: “Podul Petőfi”
- Russian: “мост Петёфи”
- Russian: “Мост Петёфи”
- Serbian: “Мост Петефи”
- Turkish: “Petőfi Köprüsü”
- Ukrainian: “Міст Петефі”
- Vietnamese: “Cầu Petőfi”
Notable Places Nearby
Highlights include Boráros tér H (Petőfi híd) and Egyetemváros - A38.
Nearby Places
Explore places such as Bernovits Vilma and Boráros tér H.
Budapest: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Belváros, Víziváros, Óbuda, and East Pest.
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