Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Irish Ferries route map. Since June 2021, Dover-Calais has also been operated. Irish Ferries is an Irish ferry and transport company that operates passenger and freight services on routes between Ireland, Britain and Continental Europe, including Dublin Port–Holyhead; Rosslare Europort to Pembroke as well as Dublin Port-Cherbourg in France.
From 7 April 2021, Irish Ferries is introducing a new twice-daily ship on the Rosslare–Pembroke route, which will be the fastest RORO vessel between Ireland and the UK (4 hours 01 minute), with capacity for 1,500 passengers, 100 freight vehicles and 700 cars depending on freight volume. [20]
The latter, a Brittany Ferries Cork–Santander service, started in 2018 but was cancelled in early 2020. [22] [23] In April 2022, the Port of Cork company entered into a three-year agreement, with Brittany Ferries, for a second weekly sailing between Cork and Roscoff. [24]
MV Muirneag is a ro-ro freight ferry, built in 1979 as MV Mercandian Carrier.From 1986 to 2002, she was named MV Belard, serving initially across the Irish Sea.From 2002 to 2013, she was chartered by Caledonian MacBrayne on the Stornoway to Ullapool freight crossing, until she was replaced by Clipper Ranger.
Merchant Ferries [ edit ] The Inisheer was built in 2000 as the Northern Merchant by Astilleros Españoles S.A. in Seville, Spain for Merchant Ferries and was supposed originally to operate in the Irish Sea , likely between Liverpool and Dublin .
Roll-on/roll-off passenger ferry services run regularly across the Irish Sea to Holyhead in Wales and in the summer months and at Christmas to Douglas, Isle of Man. [14] Services also go to Cherbourg, France. [15] The largest car ferry in the world, the Irish Ferries ship MV Ulysses (2000) which can carry up to 2000 passengers, runs on the ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Strait Feronia is a passenger, freight and vehicle or ROPAX ferry owned and operated by StraitNZ as part of its Bluebridge subsidiary. [3] The ship is a twin of MS Liverpool Seaways . The vessel was initially named Mersey Viking and saw service in the Irish Sea , eventually being renamed Dublin Viking and then Dublin Seaways .