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The total travel time between the first and the last stop is 50 minutes. At peak times, trains run every 15 minutes. [ 3 ] That line currently contains 13 stations (corresponding to Srbija voz Line 55 [ 4 ] and Belgrade public transport Line 100 [ 5 ] ):
This was performed on the Rijeka–Zagreb line, which due to the mountainous Gorski kotar region had a need for more powerful trains than the traditional diesel powered ones. Beginning with the modernisation of the Zagreb–Belgrade railway line an electrification system of 25 kV/50 Hz was used. Electrification on other lines in Croatia was ...
Yugoslav Railways (Croatian: Jugoslavenske željeznice; Serbian: Jugoslovenske železnice, Југословенске железнице; Macedonian: Југословенски железници, romanized: Jugoslovenski železnici; Slovene: Jugoslovanske železnice), with standard acronym JŽ (ЈЖ in Cyrillic), was the state railway company of Yugoslavia, operational from the 1920s to the ...
By mid-1930s Aeroput inaugurated two routes linking Belgrade and Zagreb with Dubrovnik through Sarajevo, and, in 1938, it inaugurated an international route linking Dubrovnik, which was becoming a major holiday destination, through Sarajevo, to Zagreb, Vienna, Brno and Prague. [4
Belgrade has an extensive public transport system, which consists of buses, trams, trolley buses and trains operated by the city-owned GSP Belgrade [1] and several private companies. All companies participate in Integrated Tariff System (ITS), which makes tickets transferable between companies and vehicle types.
In 2010, the section Pančevo bridge - New Belgrade was reconstructed and included in the new system of urban electric trains, called the BG Voz. An important difference of the new system is the tact timetable for the movement of electric trains: at rush hour, the intervals are exactly 15 minutes, the rest of the time - half an hour.
The concession included the construction of the Belgrade–Niš railway, the train bridge over the Sava river and a railway that would connect Belgrade to Zemun, a border town of Austria-Hungary at the time. The location of the future station building was chosen in 1881. [8] It was a marshy bog called Ciganska bara ("Gypsy pond"). [7]
Map of the Bosnian Eastern Railway, from the 1908 book by Milena Mrazović A freight train in 1970. Bosnische Ostbahn (Bosanska istočna pruga) 166.4 km, built 1906. [9] Sarajevo – Pale – Prača - Ustiprača – Međeđa – Uvac 137.6 km (Serbian border); Extension Uvac - Priboj, Serbia (built 1929). This line is connected to the Bosna ...