Construction is underway for a new intermodal terminal in the Polish port of Gdynia. It should help induce a modal shift from road to rail, but the future facility will also serve military freight. It should be completed in the second half of 2026.
The project seeks to develop the underutilised western parts of the Gdynia port, according to trojmiasto.pl. The development should help take trucks off the road and put more freight on rail, thereby reducing congestion and enabling efficient transshipment of both civilian and military freight, including heavy equipment such as main battle tanks.
With 50% EU funding, the construction project envisages 2.73 kilometres of new railway tracks, a total surface of 30,000 square metres and a stationary loading ramp for heavy vehicles.
The new terminal fits into a broader effort to improve infrastructure in the Gdynia port. Poland is also working on a new railway station in the area and modernisations on railway line 201 (part of the TEN-T network).