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  2. Transport in Belgrade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transport_in_Belgrade

    The main Belgrade Bus Station is located at Železnička 4, [5] which is closed since 29 September 2024, and currently being demolished. It was replaced with a new bus station in New Belgrade. [6] City public bus transportation is operated by 4 main carriers: Gradsko saobraćajno preduzeće Beograd (GSP) [1] – city-owned company

  3. GSP Belgrade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GSP_Belgrade

    GSP Belgrade introduced BusPlus on 1 February 2012. BusPlus is an electronic payment method where commuters load fares on a thin plastic card. [5] Also, the private carriers were introduced and integrated in tariff system – Integrated Tariff System (ITS). [6] There are 145 lines, out of which 12 are tram, 8 are trolleybus and 125 are bus lines.

  4. Niš Bus Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niš_Bus_Station

    Niš Bus Station is the main bus station in Niš, Serbia. The station is a hub for urban transit and intercity carrier Niš-Ekspres. Buses from Niš to Belgrade, the capital of Serbia, run every 30 minutes. Direct bus lines are available, as well as buses that stop in multiple cities on the way.

  5. Trams in Belgrade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trams_in_Belgrade

    The line was established on 12 July 2018 [16] alongside bus line 38A to reach the station which then briefly served as the starting point of the Belgrade–Bar railway. [17] The line was discountinued alongside line 3 in 2019, [15] while the station was closed down in 2021. [18] Line 5 - Kalemegdan /Donji Grad/ - Ustanička. Line 6 - Tašmajdan ...

  6. Lasta Beograd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lasta_Beograd

    Lasta (Serbian: Ласта, full legal name: Saobraćajno preduzeće Lasta a.d. Beograd) is a Serbian bus company headquartered in Belgrade, Serbia. It is part of the pan-European Eurolines network [3] and operates bus coaches on a comprehensive network of routes throughout Serbia and Europe.

  7. Niš Constantine the Great Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niš_Constantine_the_Great...

    Airport bus - old type. Two bus lines operated by city public bus company (PE Directorate for Public Urban Transport Niš) connect the airport to the city center and most of the Niš suburbs - line 34A (Airport-Central Bus Station-Central Railway station-Airport) and 34B (Airport-Central Railway station-Central Bus Station-Airport). [28]

  8. Trg Kralja Aleksandra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trg_Kralja_Aleksandra

    During the time of Ottoman Empire, the King Aleksander square was called "Arnaut bazaar" (from Persian, بازار, bāzār), in Turkish "The Albanian marketplace."After the Serbian liberation of Nis 1878th, the square was renamed to the square of the Mihailo Obrenović III, the ancestor of then the Prince, later the King of Serbia, Milan Obrenovic.

  9. Niš-Ekspres - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niš-Ekspres

    On 1 May 1999, a bus was struck by a NATO missile during the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. The Niš-Ekspres bus was operating on the Niš-Priština line, which is no longer operated today. The BBC reported that 23 people were killed. [5] In terrorist bombing on 16 February 2001, 12 civilians were killed while they were on a bus. [6]