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Tramway Live Cams
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From Ukrtelecom we get a view of Lenin Square in Cherkasy, Ukraine where trolleybuses pass by. Cherkasy is a 94 km trolleybus system with around 130 vehicles running on 11 routes. The camera gives a movie picture using Axis camera control software.
From Chernigiv (Chernigov) in Ukraine this camera from Ukrtelecom shows a central square, titled Perekhrestya on the web page, where trolleybuses pass by in the foreground and use the road on the right. Chernigiv is a 94 km trolleybus system with around 130 vehicles running on 11 routes. The camera gives a movie picture using Axis camera control software.
This Ukrtelecom camera gives a view of the Opera Theatre in Dnipropetrovsk (Yekaterinoslav) in Ukraine. Trams and the occasional trolleybus pass by. The city has an 88 km tramway with over 300 cars on 15 routes and a 189 km trolleybus system with around 300 vehicles running on 20 routes. The camera gives a "Windows" movie picture.
An Ukrtelecom camera which shows Artema Street in Donetsk (Stalino, Yuzovka) in Ukraine, where trolleybuses run. The city has a 162 km trolleybus system with over 300 vehicles running on 16 routes. The camera gives a movie picture using Axis camera control software.
This camera in Kharkiv (Kharkov), Ukraine, looks out of a window at the 'Real Bank' showing trolleybuses at Pavlovopolsky Market with the building site for a metro station in the background. Kharkiv is a 272 km trolleybus system, Ukraine's second largest, with over 650 vehicles running on 40 routes. The camera automatically updates every 5 seconds, but clicking on the link below the image slows this to 16 seconds.
An Ukrtelecom camera showing Rosa Luxembourg Square in Kharkiv (Kharkov), where trams pass across the view. Kharkiv has a 249 km tramway system with over 500 trams and which was opened in 1882, the second largest in the Ukraine. The camera gives a movie picture using Axis ActiveX camera control software.
Kiev (Kyiv) in Ukraine does have a tramway, but this camera from Ukrtelecom shows Solomyanska Square, where trolleybuses cross the foreground of the view and turn to the right. Kiev is a 318 km trolleybus system, Ukraine's largest, with over 1,000 vehicles running on 32 routes. The camera gives a "Windows" movie picture.
Mariupol (Zhdanov) in Ukraine does have a tramway, but this camera from Ukrtelecom shows Lenin Avenue, where trolleybuses run. The city has a 88 km trolleybus system with around 130 vehicles running on 15 routes. The camera gives a movie picture using Axis camera control software, but it is sometimes off-line.
An Ukrtelecom camera at Korpusnyj Garden in Poltava, Ukraine where trolleybuses pass by in the foreground and also come into the bottom right of the picture and turn right to pull into a stop halfway up the street. Poltava is a 63 km trolleybus system with around 140 vehicles running on 10 routes. The image automatically updates every 8 seconds.
This Ukrtelecom camera gives a view of Gagarin Square in Vinnytsya (Vinnitsa) in Ukraine, showing trolleybuses and trams. The city has a 64 km trolleybus system with over 150 vehicles running on 5 routes and a 20 km metre gauge tramway with around 110 trams. The camera gives a "Windows" movie picture but is sometimes off-line.
Zaporizhzhya (Alexandrovsk, Zaporozhye) in Ukraine does have a tramway, but this camera from Ukrtelecom shows Zhovtneva (October) Square, where trolleybuses pass. Zaporizhzhya is a 175 km trolleybus system with around 270 vehicles running on 23 routes. The camera gives a movie picture using Axis camera control software.
This camera from Ukrtelecom shows Shchorsa Street in Zhytomyr (Zhitomir) in Ukraine, where trolleybuses frequently pass by. Zhitomir is a 96 km trolleybus system with over 200 vehicles running on 11 routes. In the background of the view, one of 38 trams of the 9 km metre gauge system occasionally crosses. Occasionally the camera has been moved and then does not show the roadway and it is sometimes off-line. The site gives a movie picture using Axis ActiveX camera control software.
This camera is in Brighton, England and shows the Volk's Electric Railway, Britain's first public electric railway, which was opened in 1883. The view is towards the Palace Pier with Marine Parade in the foreground and the remains of the derelict West Pier just visible on the horizon to the right. The Volk's line is at the lower level of Madeira Drive, just visible crossing the scene. The page automatically refreshes every 30 seconds, but image update is irregular.
Relocated from Piccadilly Gardens, Greater Manchester PTE, the Metrolink operator, now give us a view down London Road away from the City Centre with the tram tracks in and out of Piccadilly railway station undercroft. The view updates every 30 seconds.
This camera comes from the BBC in Manchester, England and looks down along Oxford Street towards St Peter's Square and beyond towards the Town Hall and suggests that you "Look out for passing trams!". It automatically refreshes every couple of minutes. Also from the BBC in Manchester, to see a series of videos from the driving cabs of Manchester trams, click here.
Not a tram, but from the BBC we get this view of the Transporter Bridge which spans the Tees in Middlesbrough, England. It is 851 feet long (570 feet between the two towers), 225 feet high at the tallest point, and was opened on 17th October 1911. A gondola carrying 200 people (or 6-8 cars) is pulled across in 90 seconds by cables winched by two 30 hp electric motors. The image automatically updates every five minutes.
The new Nottingham Express Transit opened in March 2004. This range of traffic cameras includes one at Theatre Square which gives various views, but sometimes shows the tram tracks crossing at Wollaton Street where trams may often be seen. The image automatically updates every four minutes. Click on the image for a larger picture. To see a "high speed" ride from the cab of a new tram as filmed by the BBC, click here.
The first page gives you a choice of a list or a map of locations of traffic cameras in Sheffield, England. The cameras 8 - direction Park Square South; 9 - Park Square North; 10 - Infirmary Road / Hoyle Street; 11 - Ridgeway Road; 12 - Ridgeway Road; and 16 - Middlewood Road; certainly show Sheffield Supertrams, others may do as well. The camera directions change, so the tramway may not always be visible, but a there is a map next to the image and a small panoramic view with street names, so that you can identify the direction that the camera is pointing. The images are updated every minute, but you will need to use refresh on your browser.
Not a live camera but the BBC have provided a couple of video rides (with sound) from the cab of a Sheffield Supertram, which are worth a look. One is "high speed" from Meadowhall to Middlewood, the other is in the city centre. They require RealPlayer to be installed on your computer.
As well as its main line railway exhibits, the Illinois Railway Museum at Union, Illinois, USA, has a large range of interurbans, streetcars and trolley coaches. On running days examples can be seen from the web cameras around their site. They have a variable automatic update which defaults to 8 seconds, but with a 2 second option for high speed lines.
This camera is in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, and shows the Metrodome, past which run light rail cars of the new Minneapolis to St Paul "Hiawatha Line". The initial view shows the tracks beside the Metrodome sports venue. From the selection box above the image, 'Metrodome-Plaza' gives a side view of cars and 'Light-rail site' shows the tram stop. Controls allow the camera to be zoomed and it can be re-positioned by clicking on either the image or the panoramic viewfinder below it. Use refresh on your browser for an update, but the camera is sometimes off-line.
This camera is in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, from "Fat Harry's" bar looking across St. Charles Avenue, close to its junction with Napoleon Avenue. The grass median strip carries the heritage streetcars and the view between the trees shows the uptown trolley stop on the far track. The image automatically updates every 20 seconds. For a long time service was suspended due to Hurricane Katrina storm damage to tracks and overhead power supply, but we are pleased to say that the streetcars are now back.
From an office in downtown Portland, Oregon, USA, we can see a single track on the streetcar system. The camera is located at the corner of SW Washington Street and 11th Avenue. The view automatically updates every 20 seconds. There is also a video option and an archive of views from the previous 24 hours.
After leaving Portland, Oregon, USA, the MAX (the marketing name for the light rail system) runs along the side of the Banfield Freeway, partly sharing the right of way with the Union Pacific Railroad. This link is to a map and a series of twelve traffic cameras on Interstate 84, in some of which the tramway can be seen. Clicking on the individual small view or the map gives a larger image which automatically updates every few minutes.
This link is to a set of traffic cameras in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. where there is a main map showing the freeways and interstates in the city area and the route of the Trax LRV. You will see dozens of little 'cam' symbols and those next to the tram route will show the tramway. Clicking on the displayed image gives an enlargement. Use refresh on your browser to update. Clicking on Links and then UTA will take you to details of the Trax LRV system. The time in Salt Lake City is GMT -7.
A panoramic view from the top of the One America Plaza Broadway at India Street downtown San Diego, California, USA. Controls allow the camera to be zoomed and it can be re-positioned by clicking on either the image or the viewfinder below it. Use refresh on your browser for an update. The camera should be turned to the right of San Diego Bay where the light rail line can be seen alongside the tracks of Amtrak and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad. Also from the selection box menu just above the picture select "C.St.Trolley Station" for a good view.
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