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After the privatization of the "Robne kuće Beograd" in 2007, owner of the first four floors became "Verano Motors". Studio B is the only tenant who has been in the building since it was opened in 1974. [10] As of June 2012, the basement floor is occupied by a Mercator retail store.
Robne kuće Beograd company was founded in 1965 and soon became the largest supermarket chain in former SFR Yugoslavia, and third largest chain in Europe. [3] [4] In 1970, it opened a store in the capital city of Belgrade that opened 24 hours a day, the first such store in SFR Yugoslavia. [5]
Mali Beograd is an urban neighborhood of the city of Novi Sad, Serbia. It is located on the northern bank of Danube-Tisa-Danube canal , between Vidovdansko Naselje and Oil Refinery . Large number of inhabitants of Mali Beograd are ethnic Roma .
www.vrsac.com Vršac ( Serbian Cyrillic : Вршац , pronounced [ʋr̩̂ʃat͡s] ) is a city in the autonomous province of Vojvodina , Serbia . As of 2022, the city urban area had a population of 31,946, while the city administrative area had 45,462 inhabitants.
It offers a range of facilities, such as hotels, congress halls (e.g. Sava Centar), Class A and B office buildings, and business parks (e.g. Airport City Belgrade). Over 1.2 × 10 ^ 6 m 2 (13 × 10 ^ 6 sq ft) of land is under construction in New Belgrade, with the value of planned construction over the next three years estimated at over 1.5 ...
Like all of Novi Beograd, Ušće is flat, and without buildings to hide that fact like in the rest of the municipality, that is quite obvious here. With only three buildings and several smaller edifices , Ušće is the least urbanized section of Novi Beograd but some residential blocks are administratively attached to the local community of the ...
Being officially classified as a single village, Vršački Ritovi is actually composed of two separate inhabited places: proper Vršački Ritovi, which is situated near the railroad that connects Vršac and Zrenjanin and is some 3 km far from regional road, and Novogradnja (Serbian: Новоградња).
Novi Sad is the economic centre of Vojvodina, the most fertile agricultural region in Serbia. The city also represents one of the largest economic and cultural hubs in Serbia. Novi Sad had always been a developed city within the former Yugoslavia. In 1981, its GDP per capita was 172% of the Yugoslav average. [68]