|
|
Tramway Live Cams
|
These cameras show Gorzów (German name Landsberg), Poland. Choose 'ul. Hawelanska', where trams of this small system in western Poland cross the picture. The view updates automatically every few seconds, but you need a high speed line.
This camera is in Ulica Zwyciestwa in Gliwice, Poland, a town at the western end of the Katowice interurban tram system. The view updates automatically every few minutes.
This is a fine moving picture from Plac Wszystkich Swietych (All Hallows Church Square) near the city centre of Krakow, Poland. To the right of the scene is a tram stop with cars passing frequently on routes 1, 3, 6, 8 and 18. A fast line connection is required for this camera.
From a range of traffic cameras in Krakow, Poland some are of interest to us. This one is at Rondo Kocmyrzowskie. The menu on the left of the page lists others. Those at Jana Pawla II, Mikolajczyka and Na Zjezdzie also show trams. Each location has two cam views. Updates are every 5-10 minutes (variable), use refresh on your browser.
Not a true tramway, but this camera in Poland shows the Krynica Deptak Funicular railway. The image updates automatically every 60 seconds.
These cameras are in Wroclaw, Poland (German name Breslau). You get a choice of images which sometimes include trams. Clicking on each image gives a larger picture. The views update automatically every 30 seconds but you may need to use refresh on your browser. The cameras can at times be off line.
Here is Brasov in Romania. The first page gives four cameras. Click on the one on the right showing "Gara Brasov". The camera is located outside the railway station. The direction that it points varies, but sometimes it looks towards a roundabout where trolleybuses pass. The image updates automatically every couple of seconds. Brasov operates over 130 vehicles on 12 routes of about 100 km.
This camera is in Sos. Barbu Vacarascu in Bucharest, Romania. It shows the junction at Sos. Pipera. Tram route 5 passes here. The image updates automatically with a variable rate to give a "moving" picture.
This camera is in Kemerovo (Shcheglovsk), in central Russia. It shows a square with a trolleybus stop to the left of the view. The image frequently updates, although you may need to use refresh on your browser. Kemerovo is a 56 km trolleybus system with around 80 vehicles running on 6 routes.
Here are four traffic cameras in Moscow, Russia. Selecting each one in turn gives a streaming image, but you will need a fast line to get the benefit. However, below each streaming image is a link to a still JPEG picture. The cameras show both Moscow trams and trolleybuses at busy road junctions. They are at Taganskaya Square, Krestyanskaya Zastava, Rogozhskaya Zastrava and Abelmanovskaya Zastrava.
This camera is in Novokuznetsk (formerly Stalinsk) in West Siberia, Russia. It shows a busy interchange between buses and the trams of this 60km system with 130 tramcars. There is a frequent tram service crossing the view. After download of Axis software, you get a moving picture, but unfortunately the refresh quality is poor.
This camera is in Novosibirsk, Russia, also shows trolleybuses passing by. The Novosibirsk system has around 325 vehicles operated on 22 routes running 282 km. You can select the automatic refresh rate from a set of radio buttons on the left of the image.
This camera is in Rostov-na-Donu, a Russian seaport with access to the Black Sea. The view looks down on Bolshaya Sadovaya. There is tram traffic in the street that crosses the view and trolleybuses run on the street that comes towards the camera. The image updates automatically every few seconds. There are four yellow buttons to the right of the image. The top one returns you to the live view, the second gives information on the camera and the third gives a larger snapshot picture. The bottom button gives an archive with images for every 15 minutes in the past 24 hours. Rostov's tramway is the only one in Russia built to the European standard gauge of 1435 mm. This camera is sometimes off-line.
This is St. Petersburg, Russia, The camera at Vasilievsky Island, is of interest to us and shows trams such as this works car. There are four access methods giving different picture sizes, two for video and two for snapshots. The video requires Internet Explorer and uses Axis ActiveX camera control software. For video with dial-up lines, the smaller image gives the best results. The snapshot images can be updated frequently using refresh on your browser.
This link gives us four small images from cameras in the Russian city of Vladivostok in Siberia. The third shows the front of the Trans-Siberian Railway station where tram routes 4, 5 and 7 terminate. The fourth camera looks along Ocean Prospect which is served by trolleybuses. Clicking on each image takes you to that camera's page. Here you get the latest picture from the camera. To the right of the picture are links to other cameras and one gives Svetlanskaya Street at its junction with Lazo looking west, where tram routes 4 and 5 have a stop. There is also an option for a video picture and an archive of shots taken every 5 minutes during the previous 24 hours. Note that the time in Vladivostok is GMT +9 and this site is sometimes off-line.
Here are small images from cameras showing Ul. Pabochy-Krystynskoy in the Russian city of Volgograd (Tsaritsyn, Stalingrad). Clicking on each image gives a larger picture which automatically updates every 5 seconds. The views show trolleybuses on routes 2, 8a, 10 and 15a. Volgograd has a 126 km trolleybus system of 16 routes and over 300 vehicles. There is also a tramway, 62 km long with 10 routes and over 300 cars.
This camera shows Prospekt Lenina in Mamayev, a suburb of the Russian city of Volgograd (Tsaritsyn, Stalingrad). The image automatically updates every 40 seconds. Trams pass on the reserved tracks in the bottom right corner of the scene. Trolleybuses run on the road behind.
Go now to Countries S to T
Return to Index