The Tenerife tram It will be operational again at night during the weekend starting this Friday. The Island Councilor for Mobility and President of MetrotenerifeEnrique Arriaga, explains that the Line 1 It will operate uninterruptedly at dawn on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, between 00:00 and 06:00 in the morning after the relaxation of the measures against Covid-19. The Cabildo company activates the service with a frequency of 20 and 30 minutes. Arriaga points out that “in view of the progressive relaxation of health restrictions, especially in restaurants and nightlife, the trams on Line 1 resume circulation at dawn on weekends and holidays.” He recalls that the tram service It already operates at one hundred percent of its capacity and that the use of the mask is still mandatory on public transport.
Friday through Saturday nights there will be a trolley car every 30 minutes until 06:00 a.m. and at dawn from Saturday to Sunday, as well as on holidays, the frequency will be 20 minutes, from 00:00 a.m. to 01:00 a.m., and 30 minutes until 06:00 a.m. hours. Once the night service ends, Line 1 will continue to circulate with daytime frequencies for weekends.
Until Sunday
On the other hand, the exhibition on women in transport in Tenerife remains open until Sunday in the hall of the Santa Cruz Transport Exchange. The workers of Titsa, the Tenerife Tram and the island’s taxi sector value the role of women in this field with the exhibition that details the main milestones of the group in the field of mobility. It consists of thirty photographs and was inaugurated last Tuesday, March 8, Women’s Day. The exhibition is divided into three parts. It begins with the first woman to get behind the wheel of a car, the wife of Karl Benz, founder of the Mercedes Benz brand. From then on, the images reflect pioneers in the sector, piloting a plane for the first time, driving a bus or a truck and crewing a ship. Likewise, the presentation includes some inventions promoted by women such as the turn signal, the windshield wiper or the broken line that delimits the lanes, among others.
From there, attendees can meet pioneering women in the transport sector at a national and Canarian level. They opened the doors for many others to normalize female protagonism in a sector always linked to men. Finally, the exhibition offers a reminder of the meetings that the Association of Women Carriers of the Canary Islands have held on different islands, where the participants have been able to exchange experiences and strengthen ties.