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Gas-powered Solaris Urbino 18 bus in Tallinn going towards Viru Keskus. Public transport in Tallinn consists of bus, tram, trolleybus, train, and ferry services. Tallinna Linnatranspordi (TLT) operates bus, tram and trolleybus routes, Elron operates train services, and Spinnaker OÜ operates the ferry service to Aegna Island on the high speed craft Vegtind. [1]
The Tallinn bus station is served by a city lines stop Bussijaam ("bus station").The stops around the station are served by the lines nr 17 (J.Sütiste tee – bussijaam), 23 (Kadaka – bussijaam), 47 (Väike-Õismäe – bussijaam) and 54 (Kurina – Estonia), as well as lines 2 (Mõigu – Reisisadam (A-terminal)), 15 (Sõjamäe - Viru keskus), 39 (Veerenni - Lasnamägi).
The Tram System of Tallinn is the only tram system in Estonia. [3] Together with the four-route trolleybus network (), the four tram lines (currently allocated into five routes), [4] with a total length of 19.7 km (12.2 miles), are arranged in a roughly cross-shaped layout, providing a backbone for the public transport network in the Estonian capital.
Tallinn Tram and Trolleybus Company was merged with Tallinn Bus Company, and Tallinna Linnatranspordi AS officially started its operations under the new name on 18 July 2012. [1] At the end of 2019, the company's bus fleet has 529 buses serving 75 bus routes. TLT plans to replace all diesel buses with gas buses by 2025. [2]
Ülemiste railway station (Estonian: Ülemiste raudteejaam) is a railway station in the Ülemiste sub-district of Tallinn, the capital city of Estonia. It is located approximately 500 metres from Tallinn Airport, [2] to which it has been connected by a tramline since 2017. [3]
Train in Tallinn in 2006. There has been a growing tram network in Tallinn, Estonia since 1888, when traffic was started by horse-powered trams. The first line was electrified on October 28, 1925. The first electric trams were built by Dvigatel, Ltd., in Tallinn before World War II and for some years after that, the last one in 1954. In the ...
CAF Urbos tram in Tallinn Airport tram terminal. The best connection between downtown Tallinn and the airport is provided by tramline "4". The tram network extension to the airport terminal was opened on 1 September 2017. [130] Trams mostly go with 6-minute intervals, the journey from downtown to the airport (and vice versa) takes 18–19 minutes.
During the 1 December 1924 communist coup d'état attempt in Estonia, Karl Kark, the then Minister of Transportation [4] was assassinated by gunshot by pro-Soviet insurgents at the Tallinn Baltic Station. [5] During World War II in 1941, the station building was set on fire by the Soviet Red Army. Shortly after the war, in 1945, the building ...
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