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Vilnius—Riga, 348 km (216 mi), available since late 2023 and takes 4 hours 15 minutes. [5] Vilnius—Warsaw—Krakow, available since late 2022. Indirect route due to change of gauge at Polish border, transfer from LTG Link train to PKP Intercity at Mockava. Vilnius—Warsaw travel time around 9 hours. [6]
Vilnius—Tallinn (3:38) As of 2021 [update] , the project is in progress with major construction ongoing in Lithuania. The standard gauge line between the Polish border and Kaunas has been built, with freight services already operating between Germany and Kaunas Intermodal Terminal as well as passenger train service between Kaunas and ...
Tallinn-Pärnu-Ikla maantee (Tallinn-Pärnu-Ikla highway, alternatively Põhimaantee nr 4, unofficially abbreviated T4) is a 192-kilometre-long [1] north-south national main road in Estonia. The route follows the same path as European route E67 , also known as Via Baltica.
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]
Riga International Coach Terminal (Latvian: Rīgas Starptautiskā autoosta) is a bus station in Riga, Latvia, for both domestic and international bus lines. The terminal is situated at the address 1 Prāgas iela, right next to Riga Central Market and opposite Riga Central Station. [1] The terminal was built in 1964 and has 33 bays.
Balti jaam (literally the Baltic Station) is the main passenger railway station of Estonia's capital Tallinn. Stadler FLIRT in Ülemiste.. The rail transport system in Estonia consists of about 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) of railway lines, of which 900 kilometres (560 mi) are currently in public use.
Tallinn – Tartu – Võru – Luhamaa: 291 expressway for 79 km out of Tallinn. Crosses Estonia in southeast direction from Tallinn to join national road 7: T3: E264: Jõhvi – Tartu – Valga: 216 continues from Valga to Riga as Latvian A3: T4: E67: Tallinn – Pärnu – Ikla: 193 expressway for 14 km out of Tallinn and 7 km out of Pärnu
The second stage of the Rail Baltica development includes the modernisation of Tallinn–Tapa railway as a part of Tallinn–Riga railway, so trains could run at 160 km/h. [4] A new train station is to be built at Ülemiste in 2019, making it the largest station on the line and starting serving the whole region through Rail Baltica HSL in ...