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Maria Luiza Boulevard (Bulgarian: Булевард Мария Луиза), also called Maria Luiza, which is the Bulgarian transliteration of Marie Louise, is a central boulevard in Sofia. It connects Central Railway Station and Vitosha Boulevard which is its continuation to the National Palace of Culture .
Victoria & Alfred Waterfront in Cape Town. South Africa. Cape Town: Nettleton Road, ... Bulgaria. Sofia: Vitosha Boulevard [69] Varna: Prince Boris I Boulevard [69]
The Sarmadzhiev House (Bulgarian: къща на Сърмаджиев, kashta na Sarmadzhiev) is a Neo-Baroque house in central Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria.The Sarmadzhiev House lies on the corner of Tsar Osvoboditel Boulevard and Krakra Street, [1] between the Sofia University rectorate and Eagles' Bridge. [2]
Bulgaria portal; Sofia is the capital, and biggest city of Bulgaria. Subcategories. This category has the following 14 subcategories, out of 14 total. ...
Capital Fort (Bulgarian: Капитал Форт) Business Center is a Class A office building in Sofia. The height is 126 m, and was the tallest building in Bulgaria before the construction of Sky Fort with its 202 m. It has 28 floors and a surface area of 80,000 square metres (860,000 sq ft).
Vitosha Mountain TV Tower, better known as Kopitoto (Bulgarian: Копитото, "The Hoof") after the rock outcrop (1,348 m or 4,423 ft) it stands on, is a 186-metre (610 ft) tall TV tower built of reinforced concrete on Vitosha Mountain near Sofia, Bulgaria. The footprint of the tower has the shape of a hexagon with three of the sides ...
It was an unadjusted street during the Ottoman rule of Bulgaria and acquired the name Vitoshka ulitsa ("Vitosha Street") after the Liberation in 1883. The street was initially built up with low one-storey houses, but turned into an imposing trade street in the Interwar period as massive public buildings were constructed, changing Vitoshka's ...
Development of Bulgaria's retail sales sector was slow until the early 2000s, when a large number of Western-style outlets began to appear, and Sofia developed as a retail center. By 2006, several major European retail chains had opened stores, and others planned to enter the Bulgarian market.