|
|
Tramway Live Cams
|
Here we have a view of the Hauptbahnhof in Leipzig, Germany. The picture is of the tram stop outside. Most Leipzig tram routes pass here. This camera, which automatically updates once per minute, is provided by Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe (LVB) GmbH, the city transport authority.
This camera, which automatically updates, shows Miltitz tram terminal loop in Leipzig, Germany. This is the end point of routes 8 and 15 where tram-sets can sometimes be seen in amongst the trees or crossing in the foreground.
A series of traffic cameras in Magdeburg, Germany. Go down the left menu panel to "Verkehrslagebilder" and select "Askan. Platz". This will produce a block of four colour views of Askanischer Platz looking west, east, north and south. Updating is frequent but you have to use the browser's refresh button to see it. Some of the other locations available under "Verkehrslagebilder", such as Jerichower Platz, also have trams in view.
This camera is in Mannheim, Germany. It shows the Wasserturm (water tower) in the centre of the town. Trams on various routes pass below on the tracks to the left of the view. Updating is frequent but you have to use the browser's refresh button to see it.
A view of the Hauptbahnhof in Munich (München), Germany. The image is automatically updated every 60 seconds. The camera relocates, sometimes showing the railway but sometimes looking at Arnulfstraße where trams on routes 16 and 17 run. There is an option giving a larger image and a gallery of earlier views.
This camera looks down onto Maximiliansbrücke in Munich (München), Germany. Tram route 19 runs along here. The image is updated every 5 minutes but you will need to use refresh on your browser.
This camera is in Nordhausen, Germany. It is looking north from Bahnhofstraße towards the Arnoldstraße tram stop used by trams on route 1. Trams on route 2 turn in and out of the street on the left just beyond the stop. Updating is every 3 to 5 minutes (between 07.00h and 21.00h only) but you have to use the browser's refresh button to see it.
Here we have a camera in Nuremberg (Nürnberg), Germany. It looks down on the turning circle at Thon, the terminus of routes 4 and 9, which is to the north-west of the city centre. The image is automatically updated every 5 minutes, but the camera is sometimes off-line
This cameras shows the town centre of Plauen, Germany at the junction called Tunnel. All the six tram routes of the town's tramway, built to metre gauge, pass here and are timed to meet and provide interchanges. The image automatically updates at 3, 7 or 15 seconds according to the transmission method selected.
This fully controllable camera is on the roof of the Nikolaikirche in Potsdam, Germany. The default view shows the Fortunaportal and trams run just behind this on the approach to Lange Brücke. From the first screen, which describes the scene, click on "Zur Webcam" to get the live camera in a new window. There click on the button "Streuerung/Control" and you get about a minute to pan, tilt, and zoom the camera. Clicking anywhere on the picture centres the view on that point. The image automatically updates every 5 seconds. There is link to a map of the location.
These are traffic cameras in Potsdam, Germany. After selecting a language, clicking on a thumbnail or street name below the main image brings that view into the larger main window for a live picture. The images automatically update very frequently but cameras are sometimes off-line. There is an archive of earlier shots. Trams are visible at several locations, but good shots of cars on routes 93, 94 and 95 can be seen on the Berlinerstrasse selections.
Here is a camera showing the transporter bridge (Schwebefähre) at Rendsburg in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. This high-level railway bridge over the Kiel Canal has the transporter for road traffic and pedestrians on its underside. Opened in 1913, it is 480 feet in length and 140 feet above the water level. The image automatically updates every 30 to 40 seconds.
The camera is in Schwerin, Germany. It shows the Schlossblick tram stop in Göthestraße near the city centre, used by tram routes 1, 2 and 4. The camera automatically updates about every 100 seconds and there is an archive of earlier views.
This camera looks down from the Sparkasse building in Wuppertal-Elberfeld, Germany. Although the camera angle varies, it usually shows the Wuppertal Schwebebahn and Döppersberg station. There is a small archive of previous pictures. The view automatically updates every 60 seconds during the daytime.
This is the Marktplatz in Würzburg, Germany. There are two cameras here, but only the "oberen Markt" one is of interest to us. The view is looking east and most of the tram routes of this small metre gauge system pass in the mid-distance. The camera automatically updates every minute.
This view is of the Hauptmarkt in Zwickau, Germany, with the tracks of tram routes 3 and 8 on the right of the square. The page is updated automatically every minute but the image itself is only renewed every 5 or 15 minutes according to the day of the week. Sometimes the camera is turned away from the tram tracks.
This is a view onto Leipziger Straße in Pölbitz, a district in the northern part of Zwickau, Germany. Trams on route 4 just run through the bottom right-hand corner of the frame. The page is updated automatically 30 seconds but the image itself is only renewed every 60 seconds.
Go now to Countries H to O
Return to Index