
Liepāja Tram Becomes Digital Marvel: E-Card Will Sort Out Lines Faster Than Riga Metro
Liepāja public transport modernizes with e-cards so people with disabilities can ride without queuing at the driver.
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Liepāja public transport modernizes with e-cards so people with disabilities can ride without queuing at the driver.

A truck driver from India proved that foreigners too can master the Latvian tradition of ignoring traffic signs.

Our legendary Snow White with her cantankerous character and original 120-year-old parts shows once again how real work gets done.

Two young women decided that zebra is just an animal at the zoo, not a road sign. The Volvo driver was surprised.

Liepāja Public Transport Agency refused to talk about bus routes at a meeting because they didn't know it wasn't a city council session.

Deutsche Bahn suffered from a cyber attack, but our tram on route 5 runs as always - slowly but surely.

At a Grobiņa intersection, a BMW and Opel had an unexpected meeting, proving that even small towns can have big city speeds.

While Daugavpils residents battle road potholes, Liepāja folks peacefully cruise along their perfect asphalt paths.

While in Sigulda BMW drivers run over pedestrians, in Liepāja our tram runs on tracks and everyone knows it.

A Volvo driver on Grīzupe Street launched an experiment with alternative transportation methods, but the results weren't as expected.

While highways in Kurzeme and Vidzeme transform into skating rinks, in Liepāja the wind traditionally blows so hard that snow doesn't even dare to settle.

While Riga residents are learning to drive in a straight line, even the strongest winds in Liepāja don't produce such circus acts.