How did Malmö and Copenhagen connect before the Öresund Bridge?












3















I can't find any information on how Malmö and Copenhagen were connected (and who the operator was) before the Öresund Bridge was inaugurated.










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  • 3





    Ferries probably.

    – Roddy of the Frozen Peas
    10 hours ago











  • I don't know Swedish (so this is a comment rather than an answer), but from Google Translate it looks like it might have been the Öresund Steam Ship Co. That same site also has what appears to be a list of vessels used by that company.

    – Michael Seifert
    10 hours ago


















3















I can't find any information on how Malmö and Copenhagen were connected (and who the operator was) before the Öresund Bridge was inaugurated.










share|improve this question









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Am543 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 3





    Ferries probably.

    – Roddy of the Frozen Peas
    10 hours ago











  • I don't know Swedish (so this is a comment rather than an answer), but from Google Translate it looks like it might have been the Öresund Steam Ship Co. That same site also has what appears to be a list of vessels used by that company.

    – Michael Seifert
    10 hours ago
















3












3








3








I can't find any information on how Malmö and Copenhagen were connected (and who the operator was) before the Öresund Bridge was inaugurated.










share|improve this question









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Am543 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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I can't find any information on how Malmö and Copenhagen were connected (and who the operator was) before the Öresund Bridge was inaugurated.







sweden denmark history copenhagen malmo






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edited 9 hours ago









Glorfindel

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asked 10 hours ago









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Am543 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 3





    Ferries probably.

    – Roddy of the Frozen Peas
    10 hours ago











  • I don't know Swedish (so this is a comment rather than an answer), but from Google Translate it looks like it might have been the Öresund Steam Ship Co. That same site also has what appears to be a list of vessels used by that company.

    – Michael Seifert
    10 hours ago
















  • 3





    Ferries probably.

    – Roddy of the Frozen Peas
    10 hours ago











  • I don't know Swedish (so this is a comment rather than an answer), but from Google Translate it looks like it might have been the Öresund Steam Ship Co. That same site also has what appears to be a list of vessels used by that company.

    – Michael Seifert
    10 hours ago










3




3





Ferries probably.

– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
10 hours ago





Ferries probably.

– Roddy of the Frozen Peas
10 hours ago













I don't know Swedish (so this is a comment rather than an answer), but from Google Translate it looks like it might have been the Öresund Steam Ship Co. That same site also has what appears to be a list of vessels used by that company.

– Michael Seifert
10 hours ago







I don't know Swedish (so this is a comment rather than an answer), but from Google Translate it looks like it might have been the Öresund Steam Ship Co. That same site also has what appears to be a list of vessels used by that company.

– Michael Seifert
10 hours ago












2 Answers
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5














How were they connected? Generally they were not.



There were ferries, but they were slowish and mostly used as part of long-distance journeys rather than just between Copenhagen and Malmö. The last several decades they didn't connect anywhere near the city centers either. Either you would drive to Dragør (outside Copenhagen) for a ferry to Limhamn, or you could take a ferry from Tuborg (within Copenhagen) to Landskrona (quite a distance from Malmö).



One company, Flyvebådene, operated passenger hydrofoils (not taking vehicles) between the city centers. There were some commuter use but nothing that figured appreciably in the average Copenhagener's mental map. I think people on the Swedish side were generally more aware of Copenhagen than vice versa, though.






share|improve this answer































    2














    Just an addition to Henning's answer, but too long for just a comment:



    It is perhaps worth noticing that before the Øresund bridge was built, all rail and most road traffic from Copenhagen and Zealand to Sweden (in general) used the ferry connection between Helsingør and Helsingborg, about 50km north of Copenhagen. This traffic did not go through Malmö at all.



    If you are going by car from Copenhagen to anywhere in Sweden north of Malmö (which means almost anywhere in Sweden), it can actually still make sense to use the old ferry connection, which is still fully operable. Since the bridge enters Sweden a bit south of Malmö and the motorway continues quite a bit south and then east of Malmö before turning north, the road distance from Copenhagen to e.g. Gothenburg is about 40km longer via the bridge and Malmö compared to the old route, so if you plan about 30 minutes for the ferry crossing, you can save yourself a 40km drive. The ferry ticket and the bridge toll is about the same.






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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
      2






      active

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      active

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      active

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      5














      How were they connected? Generally they were not.



      There were ferries, but they were slowish and mostly used as part of long-distance journeys rather than just between Copenhagen and Malmö. The last several decades they didn't connect anywhere near the city centers either. Either you would drive to Dragør (outside Copenhagen) for a ferry to Limhamn, or you could take a ferry from Tuborg (within Copenhagen) to Landskrona (quite a distance from Malmö).



      One company, Flyvebådene, operated passenger hydrofoils (not taking vehicles) between the city centers. There were some commuter use but nothing that figured appreciably in the average Copenhagener's mental map. I think people on the Swedish side were generally more aware of Copenhagen than vice versa, though.






      share|improve this answer




























        5














        How were they connected? Generally they were not.



        There were ferries, but they were slowish and mostly used as part of long-distance journeys rather than just between Copenhagen and Malmö. The last several decades they didn't connect anywhere near the city centers either. Either you would drive to Dragør (outside Copenhagen) for a ferry to Limhamn, or you could take a ferry from Tuborg (within Copenhagen) to Landskrona (quite a distance from Malmö).



        One company, Flyvebådene, operated passenger hydrofoils (not taking vehicles) between the city centers. There were some commuter use but nothing that figured appreciably in the average Copenhagener's mental map. I think people on the Swedish side were generally more aware of Copenhagen than vice versa, though.






        share|improve this answer


























          5












          5








          5







          How were they connected? Generally they were not.



          There were ferries, but they were slowish and mostly used as part of long-distance journeys rather than just between Copenhagen and Malmö. The last several decades they didn't connect anywhere near the city centers either. Either you would drive to Dragør (outside Copenhagen) for a ferry to Limhamn, or you could take a ferry from Tuborg (within Copenhagen) to Landskrona (quite a distance from Malmö).



          One company, Flyvebådene, operated passenger hydrofoils (not taking vehicles) between the city centers. There were some commuter use but nothing that figured appreciably in the average Copenhagener's mental map. I think people on the Swedish side were generally more aware of Copenhagen than vice versa, though.






          share|improve this answer













          How were they connected? Generally they were not.



          There were ferries, but they were slowish and mostly used as part of long-distance journeys rather than just between Copenhagen and Malmö. The last several decades they didn't connect anywhere near the city centers either. Either you would drive to Dragør (outside Copenhagen) for a ferry to Limhamn, or you could take a ferry from Tuborg (within Copenhagen) to Landskrona (quite a distance from Malmö).



          One company, Flyvebådene, operated passenger hydrofoils (not taking vehicles) between the city centers. There were some commuter use but nothing that figured appreciably in the average Copenhagener's mental map. I think people on the Swedish side were generally more aware of Copenhagen than vice versa, though.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 8 hours ago









          Henning MakholmHenning Makholm

          42.5k7104163




          42.5k7104163

























              2














              Just an addition to Henning's answer, but too long for just a comment:



              It is perhaps worth noticing that before the Øresund bridge was built, all rail and most road traffic from Copenhagen and Zealand to Sweden (in general) used the ferry connection between Helsingør and Helsingborg, about 50km north of Copenhagen. This traffic did not go through Malmö at all.



              If you are going by car from Copenhagen to anywhere in Sweden north of Malmö (which means almost anywhere in Sweden), it can actually still make sense to use the old ferry connection, which is still fully operable. Since the bridge enters Sweden a bit south of Malmö and the motorway continues quite a bit south and then east of Malmö before turning north, the road distance from Copenhagen to e.g. Gothenburg is about 40km longer via the bridge and Malmö compared to the old route, so if you plan about 30 minutes for the ferry crossing, you can save yourself a 40km drive. The ferry ticket and the bridge toll is about the same.






              share|improve this answer




























                2














                Just an addition to Henning's answer, but too long for just a comment:



                It is perhaps worth noticing that before the Øresund bridge was built, all rail and most road traffic from Copenhagen and Zealand to Sweden (in general) used the ferry connection between Helsingør and Helsingborg, about 50km north of Copenhagen. This traffic did not go through Malmö at all.



                If you are going by car from Copenhagen to anywhere in Sweden north of Malmö (which means almost anywhere in Sweden), it can actually still make sense to use the old ferry connection, which is still fully operable. Since the bridge enters Sweden a bit south of Malmö and the motorway continues quite a bit south and then east of Malmö before turning north, the road distance from Copenhagen to e.g. Gothenburg is about 40km longer via the bridge and Malmö compared to the old route, so if you plan about 30 minutes for the ferry crossing, you can save yourself a 40km drive. The ferry ticket and the bridge toll is about the same.






                share|improve this answer


























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  Just an addition to Henning's answer, but too long for just a comment:



                  It is perhaps worth noticing that before the Øresund bridge was built, all rail and most road traffic from Copenhagen and Zealand to Sweden (in general) used the ferry connection between Helsingør and Helsingborg, about 50km north of Copenhagen. This traffic did not go through Malmö at all.



                  If you are going by car from Copenhagen to anywhere in Sweden north of Malmö (which means almost anywhere in Sweden), it can actually still make sense to use the old ferry connection, which is still fully operable. Since the bridge enters Sweden a bit south of Malmö and the motorway continues quite a bit south and then east of Malmö before turning north, the road distance from Copenhagen to e.g. Gothenburg is about 40km longer via the bridge and Malmö compared to the old route, so if you plan about 30 minutes for the ferry crossing, you can save yourself a 40km drive. The ferry ticket and the bridge toll is about the same.






                  share|improve this answer













                  Just an addition to Henning's answer, but too long for just a comment:



                  It is perhaps worth noticing that before the Øresund bridge was built, all rail and most road traffic from Copenhagen and Zealand to Sweden (in general) used the ferry connection between Helsingør and Helsingborg, about 50km north of Copenhagen. This traffic did not go through Malmö at all.



                  If you are going by car from Copenhagen to anywhere in Sweden north of Malmö (which means almost anywhere in Sweden), it can actually still make sense to use the old ferry connection, which is still fully operable. Since the bridge enters Sweden a bit south of Malmö and the motorway continues quite a bit south and then east of Malmö before turning north, the road distance from Copenhagen to e.g. Gothenburg is about 40km longer via the bridge and Malmö compared to the old route, so if you plan about 30 minutes for the ferry crossing, you can save yourself a 40km drive. The ferry ticket and the bridge toll is about the same.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 2 hours ago









                  Tor-Einar JarnbjoTor-Einar Jarnbjo

                  33.8k484124




                  33.8k484124






















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