GMAT Testing Location
We have found 1 GMAT test centre in Romania, located in Bucharest. For specific test dates of 2019, please refer to the end of this page.
Computerland Romania
15, Fabrica de Glucoza Street
Sector 2
020331 Bucharest
Romania
Phone: 00 40 21 204 67 50
Test Center Information
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Centrul de Instruire si Testare ComputerLand va asteapta!
Centrul nostru de testare se gaseste nu departe de statia de metrou Pipera pe magistrala M2 (Berceni – Pipera). Pe jos se ajunge prin str. George Constantinescu. Centrul de testare se afla in cladirea ComputerLand Romania.
Se poate ajunge si cu tramvaiele 16 si 36, statia Fabrica de Glucoza (sau MOBEXPERT).
Harta zonei se gaseste la adresa https://www.computerland.ro sau la adresa https://www.computerland.ro/computerland/contact/
Pentru orice problema legata de examenele de certificare, va rugam sa luati legatura cu noi la telefonul +40 21 204 67 50, +40 21 204 67 66, +40 744 501 444 sau prin e-mail la adresa VUE@computerland.ro
Va asteptam !
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ComputerLand Training and Testing Center is waiting for you !
Our Testing Center is located nearby the subway station called “PIPERA”. PIPERA is on the “Berceni – Pipera” route – also called “M2” subway route. The Testing Center is located in the MBL COMPUTERS building. Also you can access the ComputerLand Testing Center by using the tram 16 or 36, Fabrica de Glucoza station (Mobexpert shop). There is a zone map available at https://www.computerland.ro and also at https://www.computerland.ro/computerland/contact/
For any problems regarding the VUE Testing and Certification, please contact us by phone at +40 21 204 67 50, +40 21 204 67 66, +40 744 501 444 or by e-mail at VUE@computerland.ro
Thank you !
GMAT Exam Dates in Romania
Unlike some paper based exams, the GMAT is computer based. Therefore, there are no fixed test dates for GMAT. Wherever you are in Romania, all test centers are open from Monday through Saturday throughout the year. Some even offer the exam every day of the year. However, some test centers are not open on Sundays and national holidays. For example, most college-based test centers might be closed for extended periods around holidays. For precise testing dates in Romania, please visit test-maker website – https://www.mba.com/.
More about Romania
Romania borders in the north and north of the Danube Delta in the east with Ukraine, in the east along the Prut with Moldova, in the south-east with a 194 km long coastline with the Black Sea, in the south with Bulgaria (mostly with a 470 km long stretch of the lower Danube), in the southwest to Serbia and in the northwest to Hungary.
Romania is located in the south-east of Europe, and part of the country is assigned to the Balkan Peninsula. In the south Romania is bordered by the Danube, in the east by the Black Sea and the Prut, in the north by the Forest Carpathians, in the west it extends to the eastern part of the Pannonian Basin with the Great Hungarian Lowlands. Mountains, hills / plateaus and lowlands each take up about a third of the surface. Romania is traversed centrally by the Carpathian Arch (Carpathian Mountains) with the Eastern Carpathians (in Pietrosul 2,303 m above sea level) and the Southern Carpathians (in the Moldoveanu [Fagaras Mountains] 2 544 m above sea level).
Between the Danube gorge (Iron Gate) in the southeast and the Szamos in the northwest extend Banater mountains, Poiana Rusci, West Siebenbürgisches Mountains (Apuseni) with Bihor Mountains (up to 1848 m above sea level) and Transylvanian Ore (up to 1 438 m above the sea level). The mountains include the loess-covered, hilly Transylvanian highlands (300–800 m above sea level) and are drained by Alt, Maros and Szamos. In the west, the Banat joins the Theiss lowlands(alluvial plain with brown earth soils) in the far west.
The Carpathian Arch is accompanied on the southern and eastern side by the mountains and hills of the Subcarpathian Mountains; These consist of young tertiary sediments (sandstone, clay, marl, gravel), partly also of older rock, are covered by layers of loess and are divided into numerous ridges by the rivers coming from the Carpathians.
In the east lies the highlands of the Vltava between the Sereth and Pruthtal valleys, in the south and south-east the Danube lowlands (below 200 m above sea level) with the Romanian plain, which goes through the Alt into a smaller western part (Oltenia) and a larger eastern part Part (Muntenia) is divided. The fertile black earth steppe Bărăgan (west of the Danube) and the lowland of the Balta, a former floodplain of the Danube, form the east of the Danube lowlands. In the extreme south-east between the Danube and the Black Sea are the tableland (mainly of tertiary limestone) of the Dobruja and the Danube Delta, which covers an area of around 2,000 km 2 consists of swampy reed landscapes and open water areas.