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Kanin Cable Car in Bovec is the longest gondola lift in Slovenia. It takes skiers from the Bovec valley (436 m) to the central part of the ski slopes (2,200 m). Vogel Cable Car in Bohinj; Velika Planina Cable Car in Kamniška Bistrica valley (supposedly longest unsupported cable car in Europe)
Hakone Mountain-Climbing Railroad Line) is a mountain railway in Japan operated by Odakyu Hakone, an Odakyu Group company that also owns the Hakone Tozan Cable Car. The section of the line from Odawara Station to Hakone-Yumoto Station began operating in 1919, with the current terminus of Gōra being reached in 1930.
OH Hakone Tozan Cable Car: OH 63: Ōwakudani: 大涌谷 1.2 km 1044 m OH 64: Ubako: 姥子 2.4 km 878 m OH 65: Tōgendai: 桃源台 4.0 km 741 m Hakone Sightseeing Cruise (A cruise line of Lake Ashi for Hakone-machi Port OH 66, Moto-hakone Port OH 67. [1])
The Rakavlit (Hebrew: רַכַּבְלִית), a diminutive of רכבל, meaning 'cable car', and itself a contraction of רכבת, 'train', and כבל, 'cable'), is a gondola lift that is a part of Haifa's expanded public transport system complementing the existing city bus and Metronit BRT lines.
The Hakone Tozan Cable Car (箱根登山ケーブルカー, Hakone Tozan Kēburukā), officially the Cable Line (鋼索線, Kōsaku-sen), is a funicular railway in the town of Hakone, Kanagawa, Japan. It is operated by Odakyu Hakone, a Odakyu Group company who also operates the Hakone Tozan Train. [1] [2]
Cable cars in Haifa may refer to two cable car systems in Haifa, Israel Rakavlit – a public-transportation aerial tramway in the southeastern part of the city, which ascends from Mifratz public transit hub to the University of Haifa and the Technion .
A San Francisco cable car on the Powell & Hyde line. A cable car (usually known as a cable tram outside North America) is a type of cable railway used for mass transit in which rail cars are hauled by a continuously moving cable running at a constant speed. Individual cars stop and start by releasing and gripping this cable as required.
It held the world record for the longest free span between ropeway towers at 3.03 kilometres (1.88 miles) until 2017 when the Eibsee Cable Car exceeded it by 189 metres. [1] It is still the highest point above the ground in a gondola at 436 metres (1,430 feet), [ 2 ] although a temporary aerial tramway in Switzerland used between 1979 and 1986 ...