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Zagreb Bus Station

Bus station in Zagreb, Croatia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zagreb Bus Stationmap
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Zagreb Bus Station or Zagreb Coach Station (Croatian: Autobusni kolodvor Zagreb, shorter: AKZ) is the central bus station of Zagreb and the biggest of its kind in Southeastern Europe.[1] Founded in 1961, it was rebuilt for the 1987 Summer Universiade.[1][3]

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The station's operating company is Autobusni kolodvor Zagreb d.o.o., a subsidiary of the Zagreb Holding.[4]

The core businesses are passenger transport, reception of buses, luggage and goods, sale of train tickets, information and cloakroom services.[1] It covers 17,200 m2 of indoor space.[5] With 44 terminals, it is the biggest bus station in Croatia.[2] As an "A" category station, it is a member of the Pan-European Association of Bus Stations.

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Location

It is located on Marin Držić Avenue near Ban Jelačić Square[1], 1km east of the central train station[6], in the Marin Držić Neighbourhood of the Trnje borough, being one of the most distinctive buildings in the surroundings (Kanal).[7]

Routes

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The Station is an integral part of two TEN-T road network corridors:[8]

Several European road routes pass through Zagreb:[9]

Zagreb is directly connected by road infrastructure to six highways in Croatia (A1, A2, A3, A4, A6 and A11).[9]

Domestic routes

Zagreb is connected with all bigger Croatian cities and tourist destinations (Rijeka, Split, Osijek, Varaždin, Pula, Dubrovnik, Rovinj) on a daily basis with multiple buses.[2][6]

International routes

Regular international destinations include Vienna, Trieste, Ljubljana, Budapest, Sarajevo, Belgrade etc.[2][10]

Out of German cities, Berlin, Cologne, Dortmund, Frankfurt, Munich and Stuttgart are connected with daily routes.[10] This is also due to many Croatian gastarbeiter in Germany and large Croatian diaspora.

Out of Italian cities, Bologna, Florence, Milan, Rome and Trieste have regular lines with Zagreb.[10]

Eurolines run a London-Zagreb line, which departs from London Victoria station.[10]

In 1990, there were 26 international lines:[11]

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Traffic

Daily traffic during winter months is approximated to around 500 buses and 15,000 passengers, while during tourist season (June–September) it surpases 1,500 buses and over 50,000 passengers.[12]

According to research from 1998, daily sell of tickets during January-March of 1997 varied from 1,037 to 4,094.[13]

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Literature

  • Bilanović, Mirko (2018). Geoprometna analiza autobusnih linija autobusnog kolodvora Zagreb [Geographic Analysis of the Bus Lines at Zagreb Bus Station] (Thesis) (in Croatian and English). Zagreb: Faculty of Transport and Traffic Sciences.

References

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