Transport Ground — 50 transparent PNG icons
Every icon in this sub-collection is a free transparent PNG with a clean alpha channel. They sit inside the Travel & Adventure hub and were grouped by visual subgroup so you can ship a consistent set inside a single blog post, printable or pin.
locomotive
railway car
high-speed train
bullet train
train
metro
light rail
station
tram
monorail
mountain railway
tram car
bus
oncoming bus
trolleybus
minibus
ambulance
fire engine
police car
oncoming police car
taxi
oncoming taxi
automobile
oncoming automobile
sport utility vehicle
pickup truck
delivery truck
articulated lorry
tractor
racing car
motorcycle
motor scooter
manual wheelchair
motorized wheelchair
auto rickshaw
bicycle
kick scooter
skateboard
roller skate
bus stop
motorway
railway track
oil drum
fuel pump
wheel
police car light
horizontal traffic light
vertical traffic light
stop sign
construction
How to use transport ground icons in a blog post
Icons in the Transport Ground sub-collection were chosen because they share a visual language — the line weight, fill style and proportions all match. That makes them a safe starting point if you want to design a banner, a printable PDF or a Pinterest pin without obvious style mismatches. Drop two or three of them across a single image at consistent sizes (a header icon at 64×64, supporting icons at 24×24, accent icons at 16×16) and you have an instant brand layer that costs nothing to license.
Bloggers in the Travel & Adventure niche typically reach for these assets when writing how-to posts, weekly round-ups, subscription welcome emails or newsletter swap pieces. Save the transparent PNG to a local /icons/ folder, upload via your CMS’s media picker, and reference it with descriptive alt text — the same alt text shown on each icon detail page is a good starting point for accessibility. The original artwork is from OpenMoji and is freely usable on commercial blogs as long as you credit the source somewhere on the page or in your footer.
If this sub-collection is too narrow, jump back to the Travel & Adventure hub for the full set, or browse a tag page for cross-niche assets that share the same theme. Every page on IconVault is a real HTML document, so you can also bookmark it, share it inside a Notion brief, or paste the URL into a Slack channel and the preview will show meaningful Open Graph metadata instead of an empty card.