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The complex will have 1,700 apartments ranging in size from 30 m 2 (320 sq ft) to 95 m 2 (1,020 sq ft), bounded by the streets of Cara Dušana, Zadužbinska and Šumadijska on the area of 6 ha (15 acres). The apartments will be spread in 8 buildings, with the total area of 200,000 m 2 (2,200,000 sq ft). Deadline for the Phase I of the project ...
In the majority of cases, especially in the old urban areas of Belgrade, the neighbourhoods and suburbs don't have firm geographical or administrative boundaries. This sometimes causes confusion even among Belgraders, as many have different views on where one neighbourhood or suburb ends and another begins.
Donji Grad occupies the central part of Zemun, on the left bank of the Danube.It borders the neighborhoods of Gardoš on the north, Ćukovac and Muhar on the north-west, Kalvarija on the west, Tošin Bunar on the south-west, Retenzija on the south while the sub-neighborhood of Zemunski Kej is located along the Danube's bank.
Dorćol begins already some 700 meters north of Terazije, the central square of Belgrade.It can roughly be divided into two sections, Gornji (or Upper) Dorćol (formerly known as Zerek), which covers the area from Academy Park to Cara Dušana street, and Donji (or Lower) Dorćol, formerly called Jalija, which occupies the area between Cara Dušana, Bulevar despota Stefana and the right bank of ...
Pages in category "Gornji Grad–Medveščak" The following 48 pages are in this category, out of 48 total. ... This page was last edited on 13 June 2021, ...
The district is located in the central part of the city and, according to the 2011 census, it has 30,962 inhabitants [1] spread over 10.19 km 2 (3.93 sq mi). [2] Gornji Grad–Medveščak is a district with a high number of historic sites and tourist attractions.
Gornji Grad (literally, 'upper castle' or 'upper town') may refer to: Gornji Grad, Gornji Grad, a settlement in Slovenia and the eponym of the Municipality of Gornji Grad; Gornji Grad, Zagreb, a historic district of the Croatian capital, also known as Gradec, and the eponym of the modern-day district of Gornji Grad–Medveščak
Belgrade: 1968 SC Čair: 5,000 [7] Niš ... Gornji Milanovac: 2008 Obrenovac Hall 1,500 Obrenovac: 1982 Valjevo Sports Hall: 1,500 Valjevo: 1972 Majdanpek Sports Hall