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As Nemanjina Street comes up the hill from the Belgrade Main Railway Station, the two parts of the building form a symbolic gate. [ 4 ] In addition to cascading forms, facades are characterized by the application of contrasting materials - robust, brown-red stone from Kosjerić and white marble slabs from the island of Brač . [ 25 ]
The monumental palace was built between 1926 and 1928 according to the project of Nikolay Krasnov.. Building was originally used by the Ministry of Finance of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and after the World War II it housed the Executive Council of People's/Socialist Republic of Serbia, and since 1991 the Government of the Republic of Serbia.
The period between the world wars in was marked by the erection of a large number of private and public buildings in Belgrade. In this period, the buildings were designed according to the academic concept, as monumental buildings with the symmetrical scheme of the basis, with tall columns and pilasters and other elements which represent the reminiscence to the historical styles, first of all ...
Sremska is a short, curved street which connects the section where the Knez Mihailova and Terazije meet and the Maršala Birjuzova street, making a pedestrian connection between Terazije and Zeleni Venac, and, further down the Maršala Birjuzova, with Varoš Kapija. Sremska is known for the shopping mall on its right side.
Dom Sindikata in 1968 Eastern wing, view from the Dečanska street. Dom Sindikata is located on the Nikola Pašić Square, in the municipality of Stari Grad.The building marks the north and north-east border of the square.
The Belgrade Centre Railway Station (Serbian: Железничка станица Београд Центар, romanized: Železnička stanica Beograd Centar), colloquially known as Prokop (Serbian Cyrillic: Прокоп), is the new central railway station in Belgrade, Serbia. The station is located in the Belgrade municipality of Savski Venac.
Stari Dvor (Serbian: Стари двор, lit. "Old Palace") is the city hall of Belgrade, Serbia, housing the office of the Mayor of Belgrade.It was the royal residence of Serbian royal family (the Obrenović and later Karađorđević) from 1884 to 1922.
The Beograđanka (Serbian Cyrillic: Београђанка; pronounced [beǒɡradʑaːŋka], lit. "Belgrade Lady"), officially Belgrade Palace (Serbian: Палата Београд, romanized: Palata Beograd, pronounced [palǎta beǒɡrad]) is a modern high-rise building in the Belgrade downtown area.