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Ikarbus Bus in Belgrade Ikarbus with trolleybuses in the background, 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:
In 1955, in Belgrade was 8 tram lines with 162 trams, three trolley lines with 42 trolley buses and 14 bus routes with 148 buses. In 1956, he was released into operation first trolleybus domestic production - "Goša FOM". Belgrade and Zemun are associated trolley lines. As of 1960, there was 38 lines (7 tram, 6 trolleybus and 14 bus).
BusPlus (Serbian Cyrillic: БусПлус) was the payment method for the GSP Belgrade, Belgrade tram system, Lasta Beograd (only in public transport in Belgrade) and BG Voz. It is a thin, plastic card on which the customer electronically loads fares .
Its bus line from Belgrade (Serbia) to Paris (France) is in function over 40 years. [citation needed] With about 1,000 buses and coaches, "Lasta" is the carrier of the suburban transport in Belgrade, Kragujevac, Aranđelovac and other municipalities in Central Serbia. In suburban transport of Belgrade, Lasta takes a part with about 300 buses.
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. ...
Line 3A - Beograd na vodi - Kneževac. It was established as a bus line replacing a part of Line 3 in 2019. [15] Line 3L - Tašmajdan - Topčider railway station. 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]
[272] [273] Buses, trolleybuses and trams are run by GSP Beograd and SP Lasta in cooperation with private companies on some bus routes. The S-train network, BG Voz , run by city government in cooperation with Serbian Railways , is a part of the integrated transport system, and has three lines (Batajnica-Ovča and Ovča-Resnik and Belgrade ...
After the war ended, the city's authorities concentrated on reconstructing the demolished urban infrastructure, pushing the introduction of trolleybuses. [2] City planners have contemplated the possibility of introducing a metro to Belgrade's transit system since the early 1950s, but there were no real projects in that direction. [5]