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Serbian postal codes consist of five digits. The first two digits roughly correspond to the corresponding district; district seat cities usually have 000 as the last three digits, while smaller towns and villages have non-round last three digits.
Map of Belgrade from 1830 National Library of Serbia. The most dominant feature of modern Vračar is the massive Church of Saint Sava.Its decades long, troubled construction shaped not only the present appearance of the plateau but also the entire skyline of Belgrade.
Autokomanda map. The main feature in the neighborhood is a major looped interchange, one of two in the old part of Belgrade (the other one being in Mostar).It is located on the Highway Belgrade–Niš, constructed right through the urban tissue, which is still an issue of debate even today, even though the road was originally intended as a fast, intercity Bežanija-Autokomanda freeway.
The building's original appearance (pictured) was substantially changed in 1930 with the addition of the third story and the removal of turrets. [1]The project, created by the Hungarian architects Ernő Foerk and Gyula Sándy in the Hungarian Secession style, envisioned an 82-metre (269 ft) long two-story building made of weather-resistant red brick and stone, with three entrances.
Slavija is located less than 1.5 km (0.93 mi) south of Terazije (downtown Belgrade), at an altitude of 117 m (384 ft). [2] The square itself belongs entirely to the municipality of Vračar, though the municipality of Savski Venac begins immediately to the west.
Jajinci (Serbian Cyrillic: Јајинци, pronounced [jâjiːntsi]) is an urban neighborhood located in the municipality of Voždovac, in Belgrade, Serbia.It was the site of the worst carnage in Serbia during World War II when German occupational forces executed nearly 80,000 people, many of them prisoners of the nearby Banjica concentration camp.
Bežanija blocks. Bežanija is located west of the downtown Belgrade, across the Sava river, in the Syrmia region. It is situated in the central part of the Novi Beograd municipality, on the southern extension of the elongated, crescent-shaped yellow loess ridge of Bežanijska kosa.
The primary high-speed motorways are called autoceste or autoputevi/аутопутеви, public road specially built and intended exclusively for motor vehicle traffic, which is marked as a motorway with a prescribed traffic sign, has two physically separated lanes for traffic from opposite directions with at least two lanes and a lane for forced stopping of vehicles, without intersection ...