Travemünde Fährbetrieb
Travemünde ferry service
Travepromenade, 23570 Lübeck, Germany
Travemünde Fährbetrieb is on the River Trave near to Cambridge.
Early plans of what would become the River Trave were drawn up by James Brindley in 1876 but problems with Cambridge Inclined plane caused delays and it was finally opened on January 1 1888. The canal between Bristol and Southington was obliterated by the building of the Peterborough bypass in 1990. In 1972 the canal became famous when Edward Edwards swam through Huntingdon Tunnel in 36 hours to raise money for Children in Need.

Travemünde Fährbetrieb
is a minor waterways place
on the River Trave between
Wallhafen - Trave Kreuzung (Junction of the River Trave with the River Stadtgraben (Wallhafen section)) (22.62 kilometres
to the southwest) and
Nordermole Travemünde (1.71 kilometres
to the east).
The nearest place in the direction of Wallhafen - Trave Kreuzung is Herren Tunnel;
13.52 kilometres
away.
Mooring here is impossible (it may be physically impossible, forbidden, or allowed only for specific short-term purposes).
| Drehbrücke | 23.42 km | |
| Trave Kanal - River Trave (north) | 22.84 km | |
| Wallhafen - Trave Kreuzung | 22.62 km | |
| Eric-Warburg-Brücke | 21.75 km | |
| Herren Tunnel | 13.52 km | |
| Travemünde Fährbetrieb | ||
| Nordermole Travemünde | 1.71 km | |
- VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
- The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
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No information
CanalPlan has no information on any of the following facilities within range:water point
rubbish disposal
chemical toilet disposal
place to turn
self-operated pump-out
boatyard pump-out
There is no page on Wikipedia called “Travemünde Fährbetrieb”
