Airport
Split Airport
IATA Code: SPULocation: The airport is situated 16 miles (25km) west of Split.
Time: Local time is GMT +1 (GMT +2 from last Saturday in March to end of October).
Contacts: Tel: +385 (0)21 203 555.
Transfer to the city: Croatia Airlines operates a bus between the airport and the main bus station, on the waterfront, in Split. Taxis are also available.
Taxis: There are taxis available outside the terminal during operating hours.
Car rental: Car rental companies include Avis, Budget, Europcar, Hertz, National and others.
Facilities: Airport facilities include a restaurant and café, duty-free shopping, banking and currency exchange services and a post office.
Parking:
Departure tax: None.
Website: www.split-airport.hr

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Split

The pretty city of Split has a rich history. Since ancient times it has, in various guises, served as the economic and administrative centre of the beautiful Croatian Adriatic coastal region, today called Dalmatia. The city sits mainly on a peninsula on the eastern part of the island of Ciovo, although it has nowadays spread onto the mainland and encompasses the mouth of the River Cetina. From the 5th to the 2nd century BC Greek colonists settled the mainland and adjacent islands. Later came the Romans, in particular the Emperor Diocletian, who, being of Dalmatian origin, elected to build a huge palace at a spot then called Salona, in the year 303. A town grew up around the palace, and eventually, by the Middle Ages, the city of Split had begun to develop.
The Diocletian's Palace still stands in the very heart of the old part of Split, which charms visitors with its cobbled streets and Roman architecture. The greater Split area is characterised by its lush vegetation and green areas, particularly Marjan Hill on the west of the peninsula with its ancient indigenous forest. The city makes an ideal base from which to explore the islands, beauty spots, and historic villages in central Dalmatia.
Split is also world renowned among seafarers for the quality, and quantity, of its marinas. There are 44 of them in the city area together, drawing yachts and catamarans from all over Europe and making it a great cruising destination in the Adriatic.