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The 75 km railway for speed up to 200 km/h between Belgrade and Novi Sad, along with a reconstructed railways station building was opened on 19 March 2022 [3] [16] [14] (this part was divided in two sections: as of 2018, the Belgrade–Stara Pazova 34.5 km section was planned to be finished in the end of 2020 and the Stara Pazova–Novi Sad 40. ...
The Belgrade–Šid railway (Serbian: Pruga Beograd-Šid) officially designated the Railway line 1 is a 120-kilometre (75 mi) long railway line in Serbia that connects the city of Belgrade with the Croatian railway network and the city of Zagreb. Its route follows the Sava river valley. [1]
BG Voz began service between New Belgrade and Pančevo Bridge stations on September 1, 2010. Starting from April 15, 2011, the line has been extended westward to Batajnica. ...
As part of the 2017–2022 construction of the Belgrade–Novi Sad high-speed railway, the station was partially upgraded and reconstructed, including works on the canopy, staircase, plateau, and the addition of a ticket booth and six elevators. The works were to be finished on 28 May 2023, but they extended.
In February 2019, Srbijavoz temporarily suspended service on the Belgrade–Novi Sad railway, the country's busiest passenger route, in February 2022, due to the line's reconstruction. [4] This line has now been completely reconstructed and modernized and the high-speed train service named "SOKO" connects the two most populated Serbian cities ...
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. It has been modernized over time, and further modernization is currently being carried out.
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. [1] Electrification was finished in 1970.
Today, the station links Belgrade to Vršac, Sremska Mitrovica, [10] Šid, Valjevo, Požega, Užice, Niš, the Montenegrin cities of Podgorica [11] and Bar, as well as Novi Sad via a high-speed intercity route and other cities. [12] It is also served by the primary variations of BG Voz's lines 1, 3 and 4. [13]