Good to know is that the vaporetto service is active almost 24 hours a day. The vaporetto in Venice is the public transport in and around the city. You can reserve 2-day tickets for the vaporetto. Each route of a vaporetto boat has its own schedule. For example, vaporetto Line 1 is a crucial and busy route.
Immediately upon boarding the water bus, approach the sailor who handles the boat's boarding gates and mooring lines. Ask for a "biglietto" (plural "biglietti"). If necessary, hold up your fingers to indicate how many tickets. Be prepared to pay in cash. Do not wait until an inspector asks for your ticket, or you'll be hit with the full fare Venice Railroad Station. Page 4 Continued from page 3. ABOVE: ACTV, Venice's public-transportation company, has a ticket booth on the Grand Canal near the vaporetto platforms. (Warning: Lines can be horrendous on weekends or in high season. If possible, use the multilingual ticket machines.) Local transportation from the train station Most people use the vaporetto as a way to travel between the main sites. For a cheap but fantastic way to tour the Grand Canal, and get some beautiful views of Venice, ride the vaporetto from St. Mark’s Square, through the Grand Canal, past the Rialto Bridge, all the way to the train station. 7-Day Ticket – €60.00 – A vaporetto pass good for seven days from the first validation. Also valid on local buses. Rolling Venice Card – €22.00 – If you’re between the ages of 6-29 you can get a Rolling Venice card, good for three days of travel on ACTV vaporetti and local buses. Add another €12.00 and it includes round-trip bus You can easily get toSan Marco via vaporetto in the time frame from train to tour. Manchester, United 2. Re: Travel time - Vaporetto vs. Private water taxi. The #1 vaporetto takes about 45 minutes and the #2 takes about 30 minutes. So you don’t need to splash out on a water taxi. 3. ZXdKwVw. 411234871832282816519097