Vaporetto

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Vaporetto on the Canal Grande in Venice.
Venice Vaporetto water bus system – water bus and bus stop

The vaporetto is a Venetian public waterbus. There are 19 scheduled lines[1] that serve locales within Venice, and travel between Venice and nearby islands, such as Murano, Burano, and Lido.

The name, vaporetto, could be translated as "little steamer", and refers to similarly purposed ships in the past that were run by steam. The natives call the vaporetto batèlo or vaporino. The waterbus line is operated by Azienda del Consorzio Trasporti Veneziano (Actv), the Venetian public transport system. The vaporetto is necessary in Venice as deep canals prohibit building underground railways, and there is no space for overground trains, leaving the canals as the only viable rapid transport system. Most vaporetti have disability access.

Three vaporetti carrying passengers

It has twenty-four-hour scheduled service, with frequency varying by the line. Line 1 serves the Grand Canal. Several lines are limited to the summer season, April to October.[2]

ACTV sells 12-, 24-, 36-, 48- and 72-hour passes as well as single-journey tickets and 7-day passes.[3] The private express company Alilaguna also operates a limited water bus service, to the airport for example, although its boats (including a new[when?] one that is a hybrid electric/diesel) are not technically considered to be vaporetti.[4]

The first vaporetto appeared in 1881, in competition with gondoliers and hotel boatmen. The subsequent debate that the first few vaporettos caused helped shaped their role as "Venetian buses", as well as helping the gondoliers, as the only ones with access into the smaller waterways, continue into the present day.[5]

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Orari Servizio di Navigazione | Actv".
  2. ^ "Venice ACTV Vaporetto Lines | Venice for Visitors".
  3. ^ "Vaporetto - Venice waterbus - fares- tickets".
  4. ^ https://www.siemens.com/innovation/en/home/pictures-of-the-future/mobility-and-motors/electric-mobility-green-boat-canale-grande.html[dead link]
  5. ^ Davis, Robert C, and Garry R Marvin. Venice, the Tourist Maze: a Cultural Critique of the World's Most Touristed City. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2005. pp. 140-42.

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