MS Super Speed 2 in Hirtshals
MS Superspeed 2 is a ropax ferry owned by the ferry company Color Line. She is the second of two Superspeed ferries ordered by Color Line, after her sister ship, the Superspeed 1. She was built in 2008 by Aker Finnyards, Rauma for Color Line and was placed on the Hirtshals-Larvik route. Her current port of registry is Larvik, Norway.
Hirtshals is the Danish hometown for the Norwegian ferry company, Color Line. Each year thousands of Norwegian, German and Dutch tourists travel back and forth from Hirtshals to the Norwegian cities of Kristiansand and Larvik. Previously, Color Line also offered trips to Bergen, Stavanger and Oslo, but decided to stop operating these routes in early 2008. Another ferry operator, Fjord Line now operates a route that goes to Bergen and Stavanger. It has also been possible since the autumn 2010 to travel to Torshavn on the Faroe Islands and to Seyðisfjörður on Iceland with Smyril Line. The shops in Hirtshals thrive on the excessive number of especially its Norwegian visitors, who shop regularly in the small town all year long.
MS Super Speed 2 in Hirtshals
MS Superspeed 2 is a ropax ferry owned by the ferry company Color Line. She is the second of two Superspeed ferries ordered by Color Line, after her sister ship, the Superspeed 1. She was built in 2008 by Aker Finnyards, Rauma for Color Line and was placed on the Hirtshals-Larvik route. Her current port of registry is Larvik, Norway.
Hirtshals is the Danish hometown for the Norwegian ferry company, Color Line. Each year thousands of Norwegian, German and Dutch tourists travel back and forth from Hirtshals to the Norwegian cities of Kristiansand and Larvik. Previously, Color Line also offered trips to Bergen, Stavanger and Oslo, but decided to stop operating these routes in early 2008. Another ferry operator, Fjord Line now operates a route that goes to Bergen and Stavanger. It has also been possible since the autumn 2010 to travel to Torshavn on the Faroe Islands and to Seyðisfjörður on Iceland with Smyril Line. The shops in Hirtshals thrive on the excessive number of especially its Norwegian visitors, who shop regularly in the small town all year long.