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The Amsterdam Ferries, run by GVB, consist of several lines over the IJ and the Amsterdam–Rhine Canal in the Netherlands. The lines are numbered F1 through F9. The lines are numbered F1 through F9. All of the services are free for pedestrians, bicycles, mopeds, scooters and wheelchair-accessible vehicles.
European route E22 is one of the longest European routes. It has a length of about 5,320 km (3,310 mi). [ 1 ] Many of the E-roads have been extended into Asia since the year 2000; the E22 was extended on 24 June 2002.
The Blue Highway Association was formed in Sweden in 1963; Year-round ferry service between Umeå and Vaasa in 1972; The Blue Highway became a European Highway in 1973; A cross-border public bus route between Mo i Rana and Umeå was established in 1989 (service withdrawn in 2014 between Mo i Rana and Hemavan [14])
Incat ferry (1000 passengers & 411 cars. 109 metres, 10,842 tons) Max Mols - Jutland to Zealand, 48.1 knots. Incat ferry (800 passengers & 220 cars. 91.3 metres. 5,617 tons) BornholmerFærgen - Denmark to Sweden. Villum Clausen Rønne-Ystad, 47.7 knots. Passenger car ferry (1055 passengers and 215 cars). Leonora Christina Rønne-Ystad, 40 knots ...
European route E55 is an E-route. It passes through the following cities: Helsingborg … Helsingør – Copenhagen – Køge – Vordingborg – Nykøbing Falster – Gedser …
Most of the road is paved and two-lane, with the exception of some bridges between islands in Nordland. [1] It has a 90–100 km/h (56–62 mph) speed limit in Sweden, [2] and is usually 7-8 meters wide, enough to make encounters between heavy vehicles trouble-free. In Norway the road is much more twisting than in Sweden, and around 6–7,5 m ...
European route E47 is a road (part of the United Nations international E-road network) connecting Lübeck in Germany to Helsingborg in Sweden via the Danish capital Copenhagen. It is also known as the Vogelfluglinie (German) or Fugleflugtslinjen (Danish).
Within the City of Amsterdam, there are seven ferry routes across the IJ, two of which operate overnight. Outside of Amsterdam, the GVB operates three ferry routes across the North Sea Canal at Zaandam, Velsen and Assendelft. The GVB has 19 ferry boats servicing these routes, and is replacing diesel-powered ferries with electrically-operated ...