The Technical Regulatory Authority and the Tallinn City Government remind property or building owners to monitor the amount of snow on their roofs and...
On the weekends of 10–11 May and 17–18 May, the City of Tallinn will once again organise collection rounds for hazardous household waste and reusable items. These rounds allow residents to conveniently, safely, and sustainably dispose of hazardous materials and give new life to items they no longer need.
In July last year, reconstruction began on the Kadaka puiestee bridge in Tallinn, which had reached the end of its service life and become structurally unsafe. As of Monday, the new bridge will be complete and open to traffic. Public transport will return to its regular routes in the first half of next week.
NB! Currently important: The new development strategy "Tallinn 2035" has been adopted in December 2020. The development strategy is published in a web...
From May 12 to 18, residents of Tallinn (as registered in the population register) can once again bring their bulky waste—such as unusable furniture, bicycles, or baby strollers—to the city’s waste stations and the Lilleküla Circular Economy Centre free of charge.
Tallinn arendab lähiaastatel ühistransporti ja linnaruumi. Üks suur projekt on Pelguranna uus trammiliin, mis parandab kohalike elanike liikumisvõimalusi ja aitab kaasa keskkonnasõbraliku linnaruumi arengule.
The Tallinn City Council Archive (the Tallinn magistracy archive) contains documents from 1237 to 1889. The oldest and best-known part of the Council...