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Travel to Yaroslavl


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transiting through the city. In August 2010 the first piece of this new bypass was opened, it included an interchange, which connects the Yubilejnyj Bridge with the South-West Yaroslavl relief road.

There is one railway bridge across the Volga and two road bridges; the second road bridge across the Volga was ready for use in October 2006.

Yaroslavl Glavny, the city's main station, is a major stop for numerous passenger trains traveling between Moscow and the other regions of Russia each day.

Interurban and regional bus services depart from and arrive at the city's main bus terminal. The services run from this station serve a number of highly-populated areas as well as other villages and smaller towns located within Yaroslavl Oblast such as Pereslavl-Zalesskij,Rybinsk and Uglich. Larger cities served include Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Ufa, Kostroma, Kazan, and Cherepovets.

Rail transport

There are two major passenger railway stations: Yaroslavl-Glavny and Yaroslavl-Moskovsky. Electric shuttle trains go to Danilov, Rostov,Alexandrov, Nerekhta, and Kostroma. Diesel shuttle trains go to Rybinsk and Ivanovo. Also, many long-distance passenger trains go through Yaroslavl. The city is connected to Moscow by a fast electric train service (sitting places only) called 'Express'.

The directorate of the Northern Railway is located in Yaroslavl on the city's Volga Embankment.

Air transport

Yaroslavl is home to the Tunoshna (IATA Code: IAR, ICAO: UUDL)) airport, which was a former Cold War airbase. Tunoshna airport, holds the status of an international airport and is able to cater for a number of varied aircraft types. Voronezh based Polet Airlines is having regular scheduled service with several daily flights form Moscow's Domodedovo International Airport (IATA: DME, ICAO: UUDD).

Additionally there are the Levtsovo Air Base (Russian: ???????), and the
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