It certainly does, the question is only question is at what frequency and how that sounds.
First of all, I judge the actual transmission line to be approx 12+15+5 = 32cm long. It goes along the bottom, up behind the partition and down in front of the partition to the woofer.
The line is also very heavily damped, so the speed of sound is severely reduced, probably as much as 40%, and that brings us to a plausible TL frequency of (40% 340m/s / 32cm ~= 425Hz)
I'm pretty sure the high aspect ration of the TL, something like 1:7, will also increase the wavelength, but no idea by how much. (Ask any microwave plumber: There is a reason wave-guides have low aspect ratio)
The TL port only needs to be N+½ wavelengths, where N is allowed to be zero, which improves the impulse response, but there are trade-offs.
The bottom octave of a TL design is delivered by the port, and from around 60Hz these speakers drop dead in precisely the way TL designs do at their bottom.
If the port kicks in around 120-180Hz and a half wavelength of the port below 210Hz is well within the uncertainty here.
All that said: A speaker which goes silent below 65Hz, can be wonderful for speech, lieder and chamber music, but a bass-reflex design of the same outher dimensions, would at least pretend that the double- and electric bass were invented.