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  2. BG Voz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BG_Voz

    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]): Batajnica; Zemun Polje; Zemun; Tošin Bunar; New Belgrade; Belgrade center; Karađorđev Park ...

  3. Srbijavoz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Srbijavoz

    Srbijavoz inherited the passenger transport operations from the Serbian Railways after its founding. Since 2015, it has offered many train services across the country and in the region which include international routes to neighbouring countries and domestic routes (fast, regional and local lines).

  4. Croatian Railways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croatian_Railways

    Croatian Railways was founded in 1991 from the former JŽ ("Yugoslav Railways") Zagreb Division, following Croatia's secession from Yugoslavia.Its vehicle fleet was initially the one it inherited at the time of the breakup of Yugoslavia.

  5. Narrow-gauge railways in Serbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrow-gauge_railways_in...

    The Šargan Eight is Serbia's only narrow-gauge railroad line in service, albeit as a heritage railway.It operates passenger travel from Mokra Gora to Šargan. Originally, the Šargan Eight connected Serbia with Bosnia and Herzegovina (Belgrade-Sarajevo line) when it was first constructed in 1916; the original link extended all the way to Višegrad.

  6. Yugoslav Railways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yugoslav_Railways

    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 ...

  7. Serbian Railways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_Railways

    Modernization and reconstruction is planned to start in 2023 up to high-speed rail of maximum 200 km/h between Belgrade and Niš. 3: Belgrade – Mala Krsna – Velika Plana: 102 km 1 yes 4: Belgrade – Novi Sad – Border with Hungary near Subotica: 183 km 2 yes High-speed (200 km/h) rail is opened between Belgrade and Novi Sad since 19.03.2022.

  8. Šargan Eight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Šargan_Eight

    The railroad connected Belgrade to the Adriatic Sea, and the coastal towns of Dubrovnik and Zelenika. [1] The former East Bosnian railway with a gauge of 760 mm (2 ft 5 + 15 ⁄ 16 in) was an important part of the former narrow-gauge main line from Sarajevo to Belgrade and closed on 28 February 1974.

  9. Zagreb–Belgrade railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zagreb–Belgrade_railway

    New Railway Bridge in Belgrade, Serbia. The Zagreb–Belgrade railway (Croatian: Pruga Zagreb-Beograd) was the Yugoslav Railways′ 412-kilometre (256 mi) long railway line connecting the cities of Zagreb and Belgrade in SR Croatia and SR Serbia, at the time of the SFR Yugoslavia. It was the route of the Orient Express service from 1919 to 1977 ...