Skip to main content
NurPhoto Agency Logo
  • Home
  • Editorial Pictures
    Categories
    • Unrest, Conflicts and War
    • Arts, Culture and Entertainment
    • Sports
    All Categories
    Unrest, Conflicts and War
    Kashmiri Shiite Muslims Hold Donation Drive In Srinagar To Support Iran Amid The Ongoing Conflict 19 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    Kashmiri Shiite Muslims Hold Donation Drive In Srinagar To Support Iran Amid The Ongoing Conflict

    Russian forces launch another drone attack on Odesa. 43 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    Russian forces launch another drone attack on Odesa.

    Terminal of Nova Poshta damaged in Russian strike in Zaporizhzhia. 38 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    Terminal of Nova Poshta damaged in Russian strike in Zaporizhzhia.

    Two civilians killed in Russian attack on Zaporizhzhia. 32 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    Two civilians killed in Russian attack on Zaporizhzhia.

    Estereo Picnic Festival 2026 11 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    Estereo Picnic Festival 2026

    French Actress Kalki Koechlin In Mumbai 6 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    French Actress Kalki Koechlin In Mumbai

    Meme Del Real Concert At Spring Night In Mexico City 14 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    Meme Del Real Concert At Spring Night In Mexico City

    New Museum’s Building Expansion Opens With Exhibition “New Humans: Memories Of The Future” 7 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    New Museum’s Building Expansion Opens With Exhibition “New Humans: Memories Of The Future”

    ACF Fiorentina v FC Internazionale - Campionato Serie A 2 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    ACF Fiorentina v FC Internazionale - Campionato Serie A

    PKO Ekstraklasa: Legia Warsaw vs Rakow Czestochowa 2 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    PKO Ekstraklasa: Legia Warsaw vs Rakow Czestochowa

    AS Roma v US Lecce - Serie A 47 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    AS Roma v US Lecce - Serie A

    Real Madrid CF v Atletico de Madrid - LaLiga EA Sports 1 photos NEW
    Mar 22, 2026

    Real Madrid CF v Atletico de Madrid - LaLiga EA Sports

    View all in Unrest, Conflicts and War Browse All Galleries
  • News of the Week
  • Wire
  • Videos
    • My Boards
    • Loading...
    • View All Boards
  • Login
  • Register

Search Editorial Photos

Keywords Enter keywords to search our editorial photo archive
Category
  1. Home
  2. Search
  3. train interval system

Refine Results

Active Filters:
Sort By
Content Type
Location
People

"train interval system"

14 professional editorial images found

Loading search results...
A timetable board for the Stuttgart funicular railway is displayed at the station in Stuttgart, Germany, on June 21, 2025. The schedule show... Editorial
Funicular Railway In Stuttgart
23 Jun 2025 · Stuttgart, Germany
#12499277
A timetable board for the Stuttgart funicular railway is displayed at the station in Stuttgart, Germany, on June 21, 2025. The schedule show...

#12499277

23 Jun 2025

A timetable board for the Stuttgart funicular railway is displayed at the station in Stuttgart, Germany, on June 21, 2025. The schedule shows operations every 20 minutes from 9:10 to 17:50 daily, including weekends and public holidays.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A ticket vending machine and timetable for the Stuttgart funicular railway are at the station in Stuttgart, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany, on... Editorial
Funicular Railway In Stuttgart
23 Jun 2025 · Stuttgart, Germany
#12499256
A ticket vending machine and timetable for the Stuttgart funicular railway are at the station in Stuttgart, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany, on...

#12499256

23 Jun 2025

A ticket vending machine and timetable for the Stuttgart funicular railway are at the station in Stuttgart, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany, on June 21, 2025. The sign indicates the service interval for the historic line connecting Sudheimer Platz with the forest cemetery in the Heslach district.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.




Passengers are experiencing the highest level of unmanned ''Metro Line 15'' in an open cockpit in Shanghai, China, on June 12, 2023. Rail... Editorial
Shanghai Driverless Subway Line
13 Jun 2023 · Shanghai, China
#10162936


Passengers are experiencing the highest level of unmanned ''Metro Line 15'' in an open cockpit in Shanghai, China, on June 12, 2023. Rail...

#10162936

13 Jun 2023

Passengers are experiencing the highest level of unmanned ''Metro Line 15'' in an open cockpit in Shanghai, China, on June 12, 2023. Rail transit Line 15 is China's longest one-time opening of kilometers, and has the highest level of automatic driverless rail transit line (UTO). Its signal system adopts an automatic operation system based on wireless communication and meets the automation level GOA4, which can effectively shorten the travel interval and return-time, improve the average travel speed, and provide higher safety and reliability.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos line up at a ticket vending machine to buy train tickets in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines.... Editorial
Philippines Railways remain inefficient despite privatization
4 Sep 2016 · Manila, Philippines
#1419036
In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos line up at a ticket vending machine to buy train tickets in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines....

#1419036

4 Sep 2016

In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos line up at a ticket vending machine to buy train tickets in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philippine National Railways system, the Light Rail Transit (LRT) and the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) systems, with its corresponding Purple, Blue, and Yellow lines, make up a majority of Metro Manila's railway system, serving 2.1 million passengers on a daily basis. With the premise of improvements in service, the Philippine government, through no less than former president Benigno "Noynoy" Simeon Aquino III, led the charge in having the LRT and MRT systems privatized, claiming that the government was losing valuable money in subsidizing train fares, arguing that Filipinos from Visayas and Mindanao regions shouldn't be paying for something they will never get to utilize, and that the subsidies should be put in other departments. Despite promises of improvements in services which would be brought by increasing train fares through privatization of the aforementioned train systems, both the LRT and MRT systems remain wraught with glitches and delays, as well as marked with inefficiency with long lines even after the morning and evening rush hour becoming a common and accepted occurence, with the only visible change seen by commuters is a contactless smart card system called the "beep card," which replaced the magnetic card-based system. Activists from cause-oriented groups such as the umbrella group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New Patriotic Alliance), which have criticized the Philippine government's train privatization scheme as deceptive and anti-people, have challenged the train fare hikes and the privatized state of the train systems to the Supreme Court, and are currently awaiting an affirmative decision. Newly-elected President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has promised in his inaugural State of the Nation Address to increase the train capacity, as well as decreasing the train headway interval and implementing longer operat


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos walk past an escalator being rehabilitated at the Taft train station in Metropolitan Manila, P... Editorial
Philippines Railways remain inefficient despite privatization
4 Sep 2016 · Manila, Philippines
#1419041
In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos walk past an escalator being rehabilitated at the Taft train station in Metropolitan Manila, P...

#1419041

4 Sep 2016

In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos walk past an escalator being rehabilitated at the Taft train station in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philippine National Railways system, the Light Rail Transit (LRT) and the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) systems, with its corresponding Purple, Blue, and Yellow lines, make up a majority of Metro Manila's railway system, serving 2.1 million passengers on a daily basis. With the premise of improvements in service, the Philippine government, through no less than former president Benigno "Noynoy" Simeon Aquino III, led the charge in having the LRT and MRT systems privatized, claiming that the government was losing valuable money in subsidizing train fares, arguing that Filipinos from Visayas and Mindanao regions shouldn't be paying for something they will never get to utilize, and that the subsidies should be put in other departments. Despite promises of improvements in services which would be brought by increasing train fares through privatization of the aforementioned train systems, both the LRT and MRT systems remain wraught with glitches and delays, as well as marked with inefficiency with long lines even after the morning and evening rush hour becoming a common and accepted occurence, with the only visible change seen by commuters is a contactless smart card system called the "beep card," which replaced the magnetic card-based system. Activists from cause-oriented groups such as the umbrella group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New Patriotic Alliance), which have criticized the Philippine government's train privatization scheme as deceptive and anti-people, have challenged the train fare hikes and the privatized state of the train systems to the Supreme Court, and are currently awaiting an affirmative decision. Newly-elected President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has promised in his inaugural State of the Nation Address to increase the train capacity, as well as decreasing the train headway interval and implementing l


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos wait for a northbound Light Rail Transit (LRT) train at the EDSA station in Metropolitan Manil... Editorial
Philippines Railways remain inefficient despite privatization
4 Sep 2016 · Manila, Philippines
#1419043
In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos wait for a northbound Light Rail Transit (LRT) train at the EDSA station in Metropolitan Manil...

#1419043

4 Sep 2016

In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos wait for a northbound Light Rail Transit (LRT) train at the EDSA station in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philippine National Railways system, the Light Rail Transit (LRT) and the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) systems, with its corresponding Purple, Blue, and Yellow lines, make up a majority of Metro Manila's railway system, serving 2.1 million passengers on a daily basis. With the premise of improvements in service, the Philippine government, through no less than former president Benigno "Noynoy" Simeon Aquino III, led the charge in having the LRT and MRT systems privatized, claiming that the government was losing valuable money in subsidizing train fares, arguing that Filipinos from Visayas and Mindanao regions shouldn't be paying for something they will never get to utilize, and that the subsidies should be put in other departments. Despite promises of improvements in services which would be brought by increasing train fares through privatization of the aforementioned train systems, both the LRT and MRT systems remain wraught with glitches and delays, as well as marked with inefficiency with long lines even after the morning and evening rush hour becoming a common and accepted occurence, with the only visible change seen by commuters is a contactless smart card system called the "beep card," which replaced the magnetic card-based system. Activists from cause-oriented groups such as the umbrella group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New Patriotic Alliance), which have criticized the Philippine government's train privatization scheme as deceptive and anti-people, have challenged the train fare hikes and the privatized state of the train systems to the Supreme Court, and are currently awaiting an affirmative decision. Newly-elected President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has promised in his inaugural State of the Nation Address to increase the train capacity, as well as decreasing the train headway interval and implementi


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


In this photo dated August 20, 2016, Filipinos wait for a southbound Light Rail Transit train at the LRT Doroteo Jose station in Metropolita... Editorial
Philippines Railways remain inefficient despite privatization
4 Sep 2016 · Manila, Philippines
#1419048
In this photo dated August 20, 2016, Filipinos wait for a southbound Light Rail Transit train at the LRT Doroteo Jose station in Metropolita...

#1419048

4 Sep 2016

In this photo dated August 20, 2016, Filipinos wait for a southbound Light Rail Transit train at the LRT Doroteo Jose station in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philippine National Railways system, the Light Rail Transit (LRT) and the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) systems, with its corresponding Purple, Blue, and Yellow lines, make up a majority of Metro Manila's railway system, serving 2.1 million passengers on a daily basis. With the premise of improvements in service, the Philippine government, through no less than former president Benigno "Noynoy" Simeon Aquino III, led the charge in having the LRT and MRT systems privatized, claiming that the government was losing valuable money in subsidizing train fares, arguing that Filipinos from Visayas and Mindanao regions shouldn't be paying for something they will never get to utilize, and that the subsidies should be put in other departments. Despite promises of improvements in services which would be brought by increasing train fares through privatization of the aforementioned train systems, both the LRT and MRT systems remain wraught with glitches and delays, as well as marked with inefficiency with long lines even after the morning and evening rush hour becoming a common and accepted occurence, with the only visible change seen by commuters is a contactless smart card system called the "beep card," which replaced the magnetic card-based system. Activists from cause-oriented groups such as the umbrella group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New Patriotic Alliance), which have criticized the Philippine government's train privatization scheme as deceptive and anti-people, have challenged the train fare hikes and the privatized state of the train systems to the Supreme Court, and are currently awaiting an affirmative decision. Newly-elected President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has promised in his inaugural State of the Nation Address to increase the train capacity, as well as decreasing the train headway interval and imp


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


In this photo dated August 3, 2016, Filipinos commute on the Light Rail Transit-1 in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philipp... Editorial
Philippines Railways remain inefficient despite privatization
4 Sep 2016 · Manila, Philippines
#1419035
In this photo dated August 3, 2016, Filipinos commute on the Light Rail Transit-1 in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philipp...

#1419035

4 Sep 2016

In this photo dated August 3, 2016, Filipinos commute on the Light Rail Transit-1 in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philippine National Railways system, the Light Rail Transit (LRT) and the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) systems, with its corresponding Purple, Blue, and Yellow lines, make up a majority of Metro Manila's railway system, serving 2.1 million passengers on a daily basis. With the premise of improvements in service, the Philippine government, through no less than former president Benigno "Noynoy" Simeon Aquino III, led the charge in having the LRT and MRT systems privatized, claiming that the government was losing valuable money in subsidizing train fares, arguing that Filipinos from Visayas and Mindanao regions shouldn't be paying for something they will never get to utilize, and that the subsidies should be put in other departments. Despite promises of improvements in services which would be brought by increasing train fares through privatization of the aforementioned train systems, both the LRT and MRT systems remain wraught with glitches and delays, as well as marked with inefficiency with long lines even after the morning and evening rush hour becoming a common and accepted occurence, with the only visible change seen by commuters is a contactless smart card system called the "beep card," which replaced the magnetic card-based system. Activists from cause-oriented groups such as the umbrella group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New Patriotic Alliance), which have criticized the Philippine government's train privatization scheme as deceptive and anti-people, have challenged the train fare hikes and the privatized state of the train systems to the Supreme Court, and are currently awaiting an affirmative decision. Newly-elected President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has promised in his inaugural State of the Nation Address to increase the train capacity, as well as decreasing the train headway interval and implementing longer operating hours.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos take a ride on the Light Rail Transit in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Phili... Editorial
Philippines Railways remain inefficient despite privatization
4 Sep 2016 · Manila, Philippines
#1419044
In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos take a ride on the Light Rail Transit in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Phili...

#1419044

4 Sep 2016

In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos take a ride on the Light Rail Transit in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philippine National Railways system, the Light Rail Transit (LRT) and the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) systems, with its corresponding Purple, Blue, and Yellow lines, make up a majority of Metro Manila's railway system, serving 2.1 million passengers on a daily basis. With the premise of improvements in service, the Philippine government, through no less than former president Benigno "Noynoy" Simeon Aquino III, led the charge in having the LRT and MRT systems privatized, claiming that the government was losing valuable money in subsidizing train fares, arguing that Filipinos from Visayas and Mindanao regions shouldn't be paying for something they will never get to utilize, and that the subsidies should be put in other departments. Despite promises of improvements in services which would be brought by increasing train fares through privatization of the aforementioned train systems, both the LRT and MRT systems remain wraught with glitches and delays, as well as marked with inefficiency with long lines even after the morning and evening rush hour becoming a common and accepted occurence, with the only visible change seen by commuters is a contactless smart card system called the "beep card," which replaced the magnetic card-based system. Activists from cause-oriented groups such as the umbrella group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New Patriotic Alliance), which have criticized the Philippine government's train privatization scheme as deceptive and anti-people, have challenged the train fare hikes and the privatized state of the train systems to the Supreme Court, and are currently awaiting an affirmative decision. Newly-elected President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has promised in his inaugural State of the Nation Address to increase the train capacity, as well as decreasing the train headway interval and implementing longer operating hours. (Photo b


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos ride the Metro Rail Transit, as northbound traffic in Ayala district crawls slowly in Metropol... Editorial
Philippines Railways remain inefficient despite privatization
4 Sep 2016 · Manila, Philippines
#1419040
In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos ride the Metro Rail Transit, as northbound traffic in Ayala district crawls slowly in Metropol...

#1419040

4 Sep 2016

In this photo dated August 9, 2016, Filipinos ride the Metro Rail Transit, as northbound traffic in Ayala district crawls slowly in Metropolitan Manila, Philippines. Excluding the Philippine National Railways system, the Light Rail Transit (LRT) and the Metro Rail Transit (MRT) systems, with its corresponding Purple, Blue, and Yellow lines, make up a majority of Metro Manila's railway system, serving 2.1 million passengers on a daily basis. With the premise of improvements in service, the Philippine government, through no less than former president Benigno "Noynoy" Simeon Aquino III, led the charge in having the LRT and MRT systems privatized, claiming that the government was losing valuable money in subsidizing train fares, arguing that Filipinos from Visayas and Mindanao regions shouldn't be paying for something they will never get to utilize, and that the subsidies should be put in other departments. Despite promises of improvements in services which would be brought by increasing train fares through privatization of the aforementioned train systems, both the LRT and MRT systems remain wraught with glitches and delays, as well as marked with inefficiency with long lines even after the morning and evening rush hour becoming a common and accepted occurence, with the only visible change seen by commuters is a contactless smart card system called the "beep card," which replaced the magnetic card-based system. Activists from cause-oriented groups such as the umbrella group Bagong Alyansang Makabayan (New Patriotic Alliance), which have criticized the Philippine government's train privatization scheme as deceptive and anti-people, have challenged the train fare hikes and the privatized state of the train systems to the Supreme Court, and are currently awaiting an affirmative decision. Newly-elected President Rodrigo Roa Duterte has promised in his inaugural State of the Nation Address to increase the train capacity, as well as decreasing the train headway interval and


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Commuters are inside an MVG subway train in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on November 7, 2025. The U-Bahn provides essential public transport an... Editorial
Commuters Inside A MVG Subway Train In Munich
8 Nov 2025 · Munich, Germany
#12963422
Commuters are inside an MVG subway train in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on November 7, 2025. The U-Bahn provides essential public transport an...

#12963422

8 Nov 2025

Commuters are inside an MVG subway train in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on November 7, 2025. The U-Bahn provides essential public transport and mobility within the underground network infrastructure.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A senior woman with a walking aid stands on a platform at Gauting S-Bahn station, in front of a suburban train toward Munich in Gauting, Upp... Editorial
Senior Woman Waiting At A Suburban Train Station
25 Jul 2025 · Gauting, Germany
#12582762
A senior woman with a walking aid stands on a platform at Gauting S-Bahn station, in front of a suburban train toward Munich in Gauting, Upp...

#12582762

25 Jul 2025

A senior woman with a walking aid stands on a platform at Gauting S-Bahn station, in front of a suburban train toward Munich in Gauting, Upper Bavaria, Germany, on July 17, 2025. The train belongs to the S-Bahn Munchen network, part of the region's local public transportation system.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


A senior woman waits on the platform at Gauting S-Bahn station in Upper Bavaria, Germany, on July 17, 2025. The station is part of the Munic... Editorial
Senior Woman Waiting At A Suburban Train Station
25 Jul 2025 · Gauting, Germany
#12582761
A senior woman waits on the platform at Gauting S-Bahn station in Upper Bavaria, Germany, on July 17, 2025. The station is part of the Munic...

#12582761

25 Jul 2025

A senior woman waits on the platform at Gauting S-Bahn station in Upper Bavaria, Germany, on July 17, 2025. The station is part of the Munich suburban train network.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Four women wearing headscarves sit on a bench at the Budapester Platz U-Bahn station behind a glass panel in Stuttgart, Baden-Wuerttemberg,... Editorial
Women Waiting At City Train Station
22 Jun 2025 · Stuttgart, Germany
#12494617
Four women wearing headscarves sit on a bench at the Budapester Platz U-Bahn station behind a glass panel in Stuttgart, Baden-Wuerttemberg,...

#12494617

22 Jun 2025

Four women wearing headscarves sit on a bench at the Budapester Platz U-Bahn station behind a glass panel in Stuttgart, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany, on June 20, 2025.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Add to Board
Loading boards…
New board
NurPhoto Logo

Independent photojournalistic agency delivering global visual storytelling since 2013. Trusted by leading media organizations worldwide.

Company
  • About Us
  • Work With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Latest Galleries
Services
  • Editorial Pictures
  • Assignments
  • Research Services
  • Fine Art Prints
  • Creative Content
  • My Picturemaxx
Resources
  • Credit Packs
  • License Terms
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Support Center
Connect With Us
[email protected]
24/7 Support
Follow Our Stories

© 2013–2026 NurPhoto S.r.l. All rights reserved. | VAT IT01921690663

We accept:
Click outside this window to close it