Rīgas Satiksme


Rīgas Satiksme is a municipally-owned public transportation and infrastructure company serving Riga, Latvia and the surrounding areas. It was founded on February 20, 2003, as an umbrella organisation for the respective operators of trams, buses and trolleybuses in the city of Riga. Two years later, the separate operators of the different modes of public transport were merged and re-branded to its current name.
Along with public transport services, Rīgas Satiksme also administers paid parking services throughout the city. It currently employs roughly 4,100 staff and its passengers completed 146.8 million rides in 2015. In 2018 the debt of Rīgas Satiksme reached nearly 300 million.

Transit buses

As the company was established, the old Ikarus buses were gradually being replaced with the newer midibuses Ikarus E91 as well as new Solaris buses, Mercedes-Benz Citaro and Mercedes-Benz O345 buses. Most of the buses were also equipped with conductors until April 1, 2009, but due to their lack on some bus routes, the conductor was the driver. Since April 1, 2009, E-ticket has been introduced in buses.

Bus routes

Bus routes in Riga as of.
NumberStart pointEnd pointNumberStart pointEnd point
1Abrenes ielaBerģuciems30Centrālā stacijaDaugavgrīva
2Abrenes ielaVecmīlgrāvis31JuglaDārziņi
3DaugavgrīvaPļavnieki32Abrenes ielaPiņķi
4Abrenes ielaPiņķi34CentrāltirgusSaulīši
5Abrenes ielaMežciems36ImantaVakarbuļļi
6DreiliņiAbrenes iela37ImantaEsplanāde
7Abrenes ielaStīpnieki38Abrenes ielaDzirciema iela
8Stacijas laukumsZolitūde39Abrenes ielaLāčupes kapi
9Abrenes ielaMežaparks41ImantaEsplanāde
10Abrenes ielaJaunmārupe43Abrenes ielaSkulte
11Abrenes ielaSuži44ZolitūdeZiepniekkalns
12Abrenes iela"Ziedonis"46ZolitūdeZiepniekkalns
13Babītes stacijaPreču 247Abrenes ielaŠķirotava - Getliņi
14Abrenes ielaZvēraudzētava48Pļavnieku kapiSarkandaugava
15JuglaDārziņi49RumbulaMAN-TESS
16Abrenes ielaPaper mill "Jugla"50Abrenes ielaTEC-2
18Abrenes ielaDārziņi51Abrenes ielaUlbroka
20Pļavnieku kapiPētersalas iela52Abrenes ielaPļavnieku kapi
21ImantaJugla53EsplanādeZolitūde
22Abrenes ielaRiga International Airport54Abrenes ielaVoleri
23Abrenes ielaBaloži55Abrenes ielaJaunmārupe
24Abrenes ielaMangaļsala56DaugavgrīvaZiepniekkalns
25Abrenes ielaMārupe57Abrenes ielaĶīpsala
26Abrenes ielaKatlakalns58PurvciemsVecmīlgrāvis
28JuglaLangstiņi60ZiepniekkalnsĶengarags
29MežciemsBukulti - Vecmīlgrāvis

Trolleybuses

The first trolleybuses in Riga entered service in 1947, using a portion of the budget initially set aside for the new tramway, with the intention of moving slightly slower trams away from the city centre to allow for faster trolleybuses. The service was operated initially by Soviet-built units, although these were later replaced by Škoda vehicles brought in from Czechoslovakia. Conductors remained on trolleybuses for five years after they disappeared from the buses, with electric ticket machines replacing them in 1975. Conductors were re-introduced on the trolleybus network in 1997 and remained until 2007 when new electronic ticket machines were installed. These were in turn replaced in 2009 with e-tickets.
Trolleybuses are painted in the same blue and white colours as regular buses, although some carry advertising. Older trolleybuses still hold the old TTP two-tone blue and white.

Trolleybus routes

Trolleybus routes in Riga as of.
NumberStart pointEnd point
1Pētersalas ielaValmieras iela
3Riga Central MarketSarkandaugava
4ZiepniekkalnsJugla
5Daugava StadiumRiga Clinical Hospital
9IļģuciemsRiga Central Station
11Ieriķu ielaRiga Central Station
12ŠmerlisĀgenskalna priedes
13Ieriķu ielaRiga Central Market
14MežciemsEsplanade
15ĶengaragsLatvian University
16ŠmerlisPļavnieki
17PurvciemsRiga Central Station
18MežciemsRiga Central Station
19Pētersalas ielaZiepniekkalns
22Katlakalna ielaE. Birznieka Upīša iela
23PurvciemsRiga Central Station
25IļģuciemsBrīvības iela
27ZiepniekkalnsRiga Central Station

Trams

Trams have been in operation in Riga longer than any other mode of public transport, with the first horse-drawn trams entering service in 1882. In 1900, it was agreed that a number of electric tram lines would be built in the city, with the first electric trams starting operation in 1901. Tram construction continued until the outbreak of World War I. Operation of the tramways remained largely unchanged until 1918 and the emergence for the first time of Latvia as an independent nation, when a Belgian company took over. This period of private ownership was deemed a failure, and the city authorities regained control of the tram network in 1931. World War II devastated Riga's public transport system, and it was gradually rebuilt to its current level.
In 2002, Rīgas Vagonbūves Rūpnīca signed an agreement with the Mayor of Riga which would see the company replace the trams in Riga once their period of operation ended in 2010. The new trams would have offered enhanced comfort and safety, as well as would be far quieter than the city's current fleet of elderly ČKD Tatra units. According to RVR, they would have featured bright and spacious interiors and would have been 20-30% more power-efficient than their predecessors. The new units were expected to be produced at a rate of 15-20 per year and would have resulted in a gradual phasing out of the Tatra tramcars.
These plans were not fully exercised; instead, in 2008, Škoda built 20 three-section 15 T trams for Riga, the first of which entered service in spring 2010. An option for 4 four-section trams of the same model was taken and these entered service in 2012. A further 15 three-section trams and 5 four-section trams were ordered in 2016, the first of which was delivered in April 2018.

Tram lines

NumberStart pointEnd point
1JuglaImanta
2Tapešu ielaRiga Central Market
3Shopping Center "Dole"Jugla
5IļģuciemsMīlgrāvis
7Shopping Center "Dole"Ausekļa iela
9Shopping Center "Dole"A/S "Aldaris"
10BišumuižaRiga Central Market
11MežaparksAusekļa iela

Fares

A flat fare of 1.15 EUR per single journey applies on all Rīgas Satiksme bus, tram and trolleybus services within the city boundaries. Fares on the regional bus routes vary depending on the journey destination.
Fare collection on public transport in Riga used conductors until 2008.

Scandals

In early 2013 former advisor on transport affairs for Mayor of Riga and Rīgas Satiksme council deputy chairman Leonards Tenis was charged with repeated bribe-taking in large amounts in the so-called Daimler bribery affair, where Daimler bribed Tenis and various other Riga City Council officials to secure winning the public transportation purchase tenders between 2002 and 2006.
In 2013 police detained an employee of Rīgas Satiksme on the suspicion that he had raped multiple underage girls and filmed pornographic scenes with them, as well as coerced approximately 200 underage girls via social networking websites. He was accused of committing 42 sexual crimes against 20 underage girls from 2009 to 2013. In May 2015 another employee of Rīgas Satiksme was detained for gathering pornographic material of underage boys.
On February 1, 2015, analytical news program "Nothing Personal" reported that Rīgas Satiksme may be involved in a fraud scheme related to the company's procurement of detergents and other cleaning aids in 2013 and 2014, when plain water was supplied instead of the ordered nanotechnological detergents. In response to the report, Rīgas Satiksme set up a disciplinary investigative commission that performed an inquiry and reported not finding any violations in the procurement process.
On December 14, 2017, four people were charged in what became infamously known as the "nanotechnology case" for a large-scale fraud causing 700 000 EUR loss to the company. Among them was an official who was accused of "improper use of the service for gracious purposes, which has had serious consequences", while criminal proceedings had been initiated against two more officers, but Rīgas Satiksme was recognised as a victim in the case. On July 4, 2018, the public prosecutor issued a warning to Riga City Council and Rīgas Satiksme for the procurement procedure of nanotechnology chemicals not complying with the requirements of the law.
On October 1, 2018 police searched the offices of Rīgas Satiksme in relation to a launched criminal investigation over suspected large-scale fraud in the company. Two days later the prosecutor's office confirmed that the searches were a part of a separate criminal case derived from the "nanotechnology case".
On December 11 Corruption Prevention and Combating Bureau carried out more than 30 searches in the offices of Rīgas Satiksme and the Rīga City Council and detained 6 people in Latvia, including Rīga Satiksme Infrastructure Maintenance and Development Department director Igors Volkinšteins and businessman Māris Martinsons and 2 in Poland in cooperation with the Poland's Central Anti-Corruption Bureau. Two days later Riga Vidzeme District Court arrested 3 more people – Škoda Transportation Sales Area Director Vladislav Kozák, Honor to serve Riga party member and one of largest Harmony donors Aleksandrs Krjačeks and Edgars Teterovskis. The same day the board of Rīgas Satiksme resigned. Mayor of Riga Nils Ušakovs suspended the head of Rīgas Satiksme, Leonīds Bemhens and appointed a temporary board, led by Anrijs Matīss. The next day Bemhens was detained by the Corruption Prevention and Combating Bureau. On December 17 deputy mayor of Riga Andris Ameriks announced his resignation.
On February 28 Pūce demanded Ušakovs to provide a detailed overview for the state of Rīgas Satiksmes' financial affairs and planned steps to stabilize the situation in the company after the interim chairperson of Rīgas Satiksme Anrijs Matīss announced the same day that the company would need 37 million euros in March to avoid insolvency. On March 5 Matīss resigned due to lack of support for changes in the company from Ušakovs and was replaced by Ernests Saulītis. On March 8 Corruption Prevention and Combating Bureau detained a member of the Honor to Serve Riga, board member of Rīgas Karte and an official of Rīgas Satiksme Aleksandrs Brandavs on suspicion of bribery.