Milan has an extensive internal transport network and is also an important transportation node in Italy, being one of the country's biggest hubs for air, rail and road networks.
Internal public transport network includes the Metro, the Suburban Railway, the tram and bus network, as well as taxi, car and bike sharing services.
Milan Metro Line 5 at Garibaldi FS station
Milan Central station
Milan–Bologna high-speed railway runs mostly parallel to the Milan-Naples highway
A modern "Sirio" tram in Milan, at "Colonne di San Lorenzo" ("St. Lawrence's Columns").
The Milan Metro is the rapid transit system serving Milan, Italy, operated by Azienda Trasporti Milanesi. The network consists of 5 lines with a total network length of 104.1 kilometres (64.7 mi), and a total of 113 stations, mostly underground.
It has a daily ridership of about 1.4 million on weekdays.
The Milan Metro is the largest system in Italy for length, number of stations and ridership; and the seventh longest in the European Union.
Line M3 at Lodi TIBB
An M1 train with one of the fourth-rail contact shoes
An M3 LED screen announcing the waiting time
Cascina Burrona stop on the M2 Gessate branch, an example of a surface suburban stop