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The F2 sails every quarte hour and every 7.5 minutes during rush hour. This line was 02 until 2021. Currently the ferry departs from the jetty at the Ooster Access, near Bridge 276. This jetty is in use from February 2022. This has greatly reduced the distance across the IJ, making the sailing time shorter and the frequency higher.
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).
European route E55 is an E-route. It passes through the following cities: Helsingborg … Helsingør – Copenhagen – Køge – Vordingborg – Nykøbing Falster – Gedser …
HSC Villum Clausen On the way from the shipyard of Austal in Australia to Rønne in Denmark the ferry had a top speed of 47.7 knots and an average of 43.4 knots, and on February 16 and 17, 2000 it had reached 1,063 sea miles within 24 hours, thereby setting the world record which was then written in the Guinness Book of Records.
Amsterdam travel guide: Best things to do and where to stay for a 2023 city break ... A free ferry ride away from Centraal Station is the A’dam Toren, a music-themed 22-storey multi-use building ...
The Swedish voters rejected a change to driving on the right in a referendum held in 1955. Nevertheless, in 1963 the Riksdag passed legislation ordering the switch to right-hand traffic. The changeover took place on a Sunday morning at 5am on September 3, 1967, which was known in Swedish as Dagen H (H-Day), the 'H' standing for Högertrafik or ...
M/S Ursula in Helsingør, 1983. Scandinavian Ferry Lines or SFL became the new name when AB Linjebuss shipping line, LB, operating the northern Øresund, the HH Ferry route in competition with DSB, merged with shipping line "Svenska Rederi AB Öresund - Sundfart" which operated in the southern part of Øresund, between Limhamn (a southern Malmö borough) and Dragør just south of Copenhagen ...
M/F Tycho Brahe is a Danish battery-electric car-ferry owned by Øresundslinjen that operates on the HH Ferry route. It has been in use since 1991. It has been in use since 1991. The ship is bidirectional, which means it can change direction without turning around, so no time is lost for this.