Euskotran

EuskoTran ("BasqueTram") is the name of the tram in Bilbao, Spain, built in 2002 as a complement to the Bilbao metro. It is often described as the most modern public transportation system in the world. Trains moving at top speed (about 50 km/h) do not make much more noise than a car. Along the Nervion river, near the Bilbao Guggenheim Museum and San Mams stadium, the tracks are covered in grass (as seen in the photo). Each 25 meter long tram can hold 192 people, 50 of them seated (about the capacity of three buses). Tram access is at platform level, making it easy for all passengers to get on and off though the tram's eight doors. Speakers in the trams broadcast music and stop information. Bilbao locals initially considered it a public image effort, since it's not cheaper than the metro and it is not included in the public transport cards. However it offers good sightseeing of the "new Bilbao". At first, when the line wasn't fully operational, it was common to see the trams almost empty. An early tram system had been substituted by trolley buses in the 1950s, which were later retired.

External links

  • Schedule and stop information, as well as a more detailed history of this tram, is available at EuskoTran's website.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
list of english words of yiddish origin
jo moore
scribe (rapper)
david bates (historian)
craig david
balthorium
david bates (poet)
balat
mahler's compactness theorem
pachmarhi
balata
crusader (album)
arab oil embargo
elliot's beach
david bates (physicist)
aetolian league
ambresbury banks
westminster larger catechism
black hebrews
moldovan leu
lor
triangle offense
west hallam
memphis southmen
nyogtha
jaafari
the algebraist
cognitive semantics
styrophone
autozone
general electric f110
treniota
the works (album)
nyaminyami: legend of the river god
typo3
panchavati
fluvastatin
roblin, manitoba
walking on glass
gaylord entertainment center
privy seal
kielder forest
rosuvastatin
tanaji malusare