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When car ferry traffic across the Øresund strait between Denmark and Sweden started, the Finnish Car Club, the Road Traffic Association and the Finnish Truck Association started pressuring shipping companies to improve car ferry traffic between Finland and Sweden. The first car ferry connection between Finland and Sweden was a route over the ...
The E12 in Parola, Finland The E12 in Norway. European route E12 is a road that is part of the International E-road network. It begins in Mo i Rana, Norway, transverses Sweden and ends in Helsinki, Finland, with a ferry line between Sweden and Finland. The part within Finland is Finnish national highway 3. The road is about 910 km (570 mi) in ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ferries_between_Sweden_and_Finland&oldid=120900777"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ferries_between
Silja Line has five terminals, of which four are in Finland (two in mainland Finland and two in Åland) and one in Sweden. Silja Line terminal in Turku, Finland. Finland. Helsinki: Olympia Terminal. Served by Helsinki tram lines 2 and 3. Turku: Linnansatama. Served by the Port of Turku railway station and bus line 1. Mariehamn: Västra Hamnen ...
MS Eckerö MS Roslagen. Eckerö Linjen is a Finnish shipping company operating a ferry between Berghamn harbour in Eckerö in the Åland Islands and Grisslehamn in Sweden.The company is owned by the Åland based Rederiaktiebolaget Eckerö.
The Helsingør–Helsingborg ferry route ("HH route") is a shipping route connecting Helsingør (Elsinore), Denmark and Helsingborg, Sweden across the northern, and narrowest part of the Øresund. Due to the short distance, which is less than 3 nautical miles , is it one of the world's busiest international car ferry routes, with around 70 ...
Frequent ferry service connects Finland with Estonia and Sweden. Baltic cruise liners regularly call on the port of Helsinki as well. In domestic service, ferries connect Finland's islands with the mainland. Finland's cargo ports move freight both for Finland's own needs and for transshipment to Russia.
Viking Line's history can be traced back to 1959, when a group of sea- and businessmen from the Åland Islands province in Finland formed Rederi Ab Vikinglinjen, purchased a steam-powered car-ferry SS Dinard from the UK, renamed her SS Viking and began service on the route Korpo (Finland)–Mariehamn (Åland)–Gräddö (Sweden).