Belgrade Centre railway station
Belgrade Centre railway station Железничка станица Београд Центар / Železnička stanica Beograd Centar (Serbian) | |
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Inside the station 2016 | |
Location |
Prokupačka St., Belgrade Serbia |
Owned by | Beovoz |
Platforms |
5 operational (6 planned) + (2 metro platforms planned) |
Tracks |
8 operational (10 planned) + (2 metro tracks planned) |
Construction | |
Structure type | At-grade |
Disabled access | Yes |
History | |
Opened |
1974 (partially) 26 January 2016 (last opening) |
The Belgradе Centre railway station (Serbian: Железничка станица Београд Центар / Železnička stanica Beograd Centar), known as Prokop (Serbian Cyrillic: Прокоп) during the construction, is the new railway station as the core of the massive reconstruction of the Belgrade railway junction in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia, that officially started 1974. Prokop is located in Belgrade's municipality of Savski Venac.
The unsuccessful, decades long attempted construction of the new central railway station of Belgrade was hampered by lack of funding problems to finish adjoining 14 km of tunnels, several railway bridges of whom the New Railroad Bridge across the Sava river, a new road network connecting to the city and technical installations. Belgrade Centre station was opened on 26 January 2016,[1] serving only two daily trains to Novi Sad, as well as Belgrade commuter railways. The remaining platforms and tracks became operational and all services are to be rerouted to Prokop from the old Belgrade Main railway station.[2]
Location
Prokop is located 5 kilometers south of downtown Belgrade to which it is directly connected by the Kneza Miloša street. It borders the area of former Zapadni Vračar on the north, Mostar and Senjak on the west and Dedinje on the south. It is bounded by three boulevards: Franše D'Eperea (actually, A1 highway), Vojvoda Putnik and Prince Aleksandar Karađorđević.
History
Prokop is located in the eastern section of the former neighborhood of Jatagan Mala. Previously, it was a geographical reference, as the area was located in the lower valley of the now underground stream of Mokroluški Potok. The earth and gravel were dug here and used to cover and drain the swamps on the Sava's right bank, so that neighborhoods of Savamala and Bara Venecija could be constructed, so as the building of Belgrade's central railway station. After the works were completed, the area around Mokroluški Potok was left as a steep, elongated cut in the ground and so got its name (Serbian prokop, cut or dug through). Jatagan Mala was demolished in mid and late 1960s. The population of modern local community of Prokop was 2,103 in 2002.
Construction
The ill-fated construction of new railway station which was supposed to replace the old one in Savamala spawns for decades. The official work began in 1977, it was halted in the 1980s, resumed in the 1990s and halted again in 2000. Originally, in the late 1960s, it was supposed to be constructed near the present interchange of Autokomanda, but the idea was suddenly dropped, and one of the major authorities at the time, Branko Žeželj, picked Prokop instead, which eventually brought to the incompletion of the Autokomanda interchange the way it should have been. Despite constant attempts to build it and upgrade it, after years of starting and then halting works and bankrupted companies, Prokop railway station is still just one of a dozen secondary stations in Belgrade.
After TV tower on Avala was destroyed in NATO bombing of Serbia 1999, certain Russian companies offered to build a new, higher (300 meters) TV tower in Prokop. No one took it seriously so the news was mostly used for publicity purposes.
As a curiosity, daily Politika from March 8, 2007 reprinted its own article from 1957 about Prokop. The article, titled "For how long will Prokop defy the construction of the city", colors Prokop as a black hole in the city center and describes the project of the reconstruction of the Franše d'Eperea street (modern highway) which would include an artificial lake with lots of restaurants, foreseeing that Prokop will be the most beautiful part of Belgrade.
The construction of the Belgrade Waterfront and track removal in Savamala restarted the construction of the station once again in December 2014. Energoprojekt AD was once again selected as the contracting company and was given nearly 26 million euros and 14 months to complete the construction. For the first time the deadline was kept and the station was officially opened on 26 January 2016.
Gallery
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Location of the Beograd Centar (Prokop) station in the railway junction.
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Construction of the station in October 2008.
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East view of Prokop the Belgrade main railway station
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Belgrade new railway station Prokop under construction as of 2008
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Beovoz train entering Prokop main station in Belgrade
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The new Railway Bridge, finished 1979, part of the Belgrade railway junction with the Belgrade central station currently being under construction.
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Beovoz Prokop station in Belgrade 2016.
See also
References
- ↑ "Vucic opens Prokop railway station after 40 years". Tanjug. 26 January 2016.
- ↑ "Vučić otvorio "Prokop" posle 40 godina gradnje: Cela stanica gotova 2018.". Blic. 26 January 2016.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prokop railway station. |
- Clip of the planned railway hub with metro interchange
- Clip about the Belgrade railway hub and Beovoz commuter network
Coordinates: 44°47′37″N 20°27′14″E / 44.7936°N 20.4539°E