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  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

D-terminal (Tallinn)

The Old City Harbour (Estonian: Vanasadam) is the main passenger harbour in Tallinn, Estonia. Regular lines serve routes to Helsinki (Finland) and Stockholm (Sweden)

Overview

After arriving at the Tallinn Passenger Port, most tourists often walk along Sadama street to the Old Town.

Old City Harbour is one of the five ports within the state-owned company Port of Tallinn. It is one of the biggest and busiest passenger harbours in the world and also the biggest passenger harbour in Estonia. The port operates two passenger terminals (A and D), total length of its berths is 4.2 kilometres. Vessels with maximum length of 340 metres, 42 metres wide and draught of 10.7 m can enter the port. In 2019, the port served 10.64 million passengers.

Cruise ships berthed at cruise terminal

The port is operating 339-metre long quay intended for cruise ships. It was completed in spring of year 2004 and its cost at the time was over 80 million kroons. The number of the cruise passengers is increasing steadily, also by the implementing of turnarounds in cooperation with Tallinn Airport. In order to cope with that numbers and increasing size of the cruise ships arriving in Tallinn, Port of Tallinn started in May 2013 the construction of the new quay next to the existing cruise ships quay in the Old City harbour. The total length of the quay built by the Estonian branch of BMGS is 421 metres. With the new quay, the Port of Tallinn is able to moor cruise ships up to 340 metres in length, up to 42 metres in width, and with the draft of up to nine metres. The total cost of the project was 9.34 million euros.

Also Old City Marina - a new marina for recreational vessels established in 2010 - is a part of Tallinn's Old City Harbour.

On 29 September 2017 at the EU Digital Summit in Tallinn, a partnership of Ericsson, Intel and Telia Estonia announced that they had implemented the first live public 5G network in Europe at the Tallinn Passenger Port to connect with Tallink cruise ships at the port.

Terminals

A-terminal

The A-terminal building
The former B-terminal building which now is part of A-terminal

Shipping companies Eckerö Line and Viking Line operate scheduled services from A-terminal to Helsinki. The A-terminal and the old B-terminal are connected to each other to provide more efficient passenger flow.

Terminal is served by bus line nr. 2

Ships serving the terminal are:

Company Ship Route
Finland Eckerö Line MS Finlandia Tallinn – Helsinki
Finland Viking Line MS Viking XPRS Tallinn – Helsinki
MS Viking Cinderella / MS Gabriella (during the summer season) Tallinn – Helsinki

D-terminal

The shipping company Tallink operates scheduled services from D-terminal to Stockholm and Helsinki. Over 6 million passengers travel through this ferry terminal annually. The terminal building was renovated in 2020 and the cost was 18.5 million euros.

D-terminal in 2023

The terminal is served by bus lines 20, 20A and 66

Ships serving the terminal include:

Company Ship Route
Estonia Tallink MS Megastar Tallinn – Helsinki
MS MyStar Tallinn – Helsinki
MS Silja Europa Tallinn – Helsinki
MS Baltic Queen Tallinn – Mariehamn – Stockholm
MS Victoria I Tallinn – Mariehamn – Stockholm

Carriers and destinations

Regular carriers

Carriers Destinations Terminal
Eckerö Line Helsinki A
Tallink Helsinki, Mariehamn, Stockholm D
Viking Line Helsinki

Seasonal: Stockholm

A

Cruise carriers (incl. all cruise ports)

Carriers Destinations
MSC Cruise Aarhus, Alesund, Barcelona, Bergen, Copenhagen, Cork, Dover, Dublin, Flaam, Genoa, Gibraltar, Gothenborg, Greenock, Gdynia, Hamburg, Hellesylt/Geiranger, Helsinki, Haugesund, Ivergordon, Kiel, Klaipeda, Kotka, A Coruña, Le Havre, Lisbon, Marseille, Olden, Riga, Rotterdam, Saint Petersburg, Stavanger, Stockholm, Valencia, Visby, Warnemunde, Zeebrugge
Norwegian Cruise Line Amsterdam, Brussels, Copenhagen, Gdynia, Helsinki, Klaipeda, Le Havre, Riga, Rostock, Saint Petersburg, Southampton, Stockholm, Warnemunde
Royal Caribbean Aarhus, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Fredericia, Helsinki, Klaipeda, Oslo, Riga, Saint Petersburg, Skagen, Southampton, Stavanger, Stockholm, Visby, Warnemunde

Statistics

Annual passenger statistics for Tallinn Passenger Port
Year Total passengers
2001 5,739,573
2002 5,944,942
2003 5,862,485
2004 6,737,926
2005 7,007,558
2006 6,760,149
2007 6,514,294
2008 7,247,366
2009 7,257,646
2010 7,915,113
2011 8,478,929
2012 8,841,679
2013 9,236,429
2014 9,569,313
2015 9,793,049
2016 10,173,297
2017 10,560,000
2018 10,619,000
2019 10,639,000
2020 4,333,000
2021 3,665,759
2022 7,213,655

See also

References

  1. ^ "Helsinki set to become world's busiest sea passenger port". Yle.fi. 3 August 2017. Retrieved 17 January 2018.
  2. ^ "In 2013 Port of Tallinn served record number of passengers, cargo handling declined slightly". 6 January 2014. Retrieved 7 March 2014.
  3. ^ "New cruise ship quay was opened in Port of Tallinn on Saturday". 16 May 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  4. ^ "5G goes live in the Port of Tallinn". Ericsson. 29 September 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  5. ^ "A-terminal - Tallinna Sadam". Retrieved 11 September 2023.
  6. ^ "Tallinna Reisisadam, A-terminal". Retrieved 12 September 2023.
  7. ^ "Pääs Tallinna Reisisadamasse". Retrieved 12 September 2023.
  8. ^ "Vanasadamas avati uuenenud B-terminal". 11 February 2010. Retrieved 12 September 2023.
  9. ^ "D-terminal - Tallinna Sadam". Retrieved 11 September 2023.
  10. ^ "Tallinn D-Terminal". Retrieved 11 September 2023.
  11. ^ "Tallinna Sadam avab renoveeritud D-terminali". Retrieved 11 September 2023.
  12. ^ "Terminal A".
  13. ^ "Terminal D".
  14. ^ "MSC Cruise: Find Cruise".