Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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]
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.
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]
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.
Rail Baltica is an under-construction rail infrastructure project that is intended to integrate the Baltic states in the European rail network. [3] Its purpose is to provide passenger and freight service between participating countries and improve rail connections between Central and Northern Europe, specifically the area southeast of the Baltic Sea.
The new ship was placed on the Tallinn–Mariehamn–Stockholm service alongside Victoria I. [43] Romantika, that had been Victoria I ' s running mate since 2006, was in turn transferred to the Riga–Stockholm route, [26] where she replaced Regina Baltica that was in turn chartered out to Acciona Trasmediterránea. [34]
In October 2022, a Lux Express bus en-route from St. Petersburg to Riga collided with a truck, killing the bus driver. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] In February 2025 a Lux Express bus on the route from Tallinn to St. Petersburg collided with a snow plough near Ivangorod, and two passengers lost their lives.
The Riga–Lugaži Railway is a 166 kilometres (103 mi) long, [2] 1,524 mm (5 ft) gauge railway in Latvia. It was built in the late 19th century (commencing in 1886) to connect the cities of Riga and Saint Petersburg via Valga and Pskov. The railway was opened in 1889. [1] The final station in Latvia is Lugaži (near Valka).