Tallinn is the first EU capital to offer its residents free public transport, and though the move aimed at driving down car pollution is proving popular, visitors feel let down and others are accusing ...
In this handout photo made available on Thursday April 4, 2013, provided by the City of Tallinn, a woman is seen placing her transit pass on an electronic reader on a city bus in the Estonian capital.
Europe’s last remaining capital without a synagogue has ended that dubious distinction. Amid a crowd of media, dignitaries and hundreds of local Jews, Tallinn opened its first shul since its original ...
January 1st 2011 sees the northern European country of Estonia become the latest country to adopt the Euro and enter its 12 months as one of two European Capitals of Culture in 2011, the largest ...
That's what our guide, Magrit, calls the vast open-air theater on the outskirts of Tallinn, the ancient capital of the tiny Baltic nation of Estonia. Here, in the late 1980s, Estonians gathered by the ...
But American cities are not the first movers. A full decade ago, the Estonian capital of Tallinn invited its 426,000 residents to use buses, trains, and trams without paying a cent. [Photo: Ilja ...
The 400,000 residents of Tallinn, the capital of Estonia and the largest city in the northern European country, can now use the city's public transportation system at no cost. As of January 1, anyone ...
The European Commission has chosen the Estonian capital Tallinn as the European Green Capital for 2023. Awarded every year since 2010, the status is designed to raise awareness and share best practice ...
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