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In May 2022, vice-mayor Mircea Nicolaidis took over as interim mayor of Sector 5. [1] In June 2023 he was released and came back in his office due to the fact he was never removed from this position. [2] The Local Council of Sector 5 has 27 seats, with the following party composition (as of 2020):
The Municipality of Bucharest ... Sector 5: 271,575 6 Sector 1: 225,454 List of sectors by population density. Rank Sector Population density (inhabitants/km 2) 1
Ferentari was the first modern industrial area of Bucharest developed in the middle of 19th century, when new industrial plants were built in the area and especially after the first railway in Romania was built (opened in 1869 and connecting Bucharest—via Filaret station—to Giurgiu). In 1947, the Ferentari Market housing estate was built ...
Cotroceni on the Map of Bucharest Cotroceni is a neighbourhood in western Bucharest , Romania, located around the Cotroceni hill, in Bucharest's Sector 5 . The nearest Metro stations are Eroilor , Academia Militară , and Politehnica .
Rahova on the map of Bucharest Rahova Beer Factory. Rahova is a neighbourhood of southwest Bucharest, Romania, situated in Sector 5, west of Dâmbovița River.It is named after the Bulgarian town Rahovo (today Oryahovo), site of a battle in the Romanian War of Independence.
Giurgiului (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈdʒjurdʒjuluj]) is a neighborhood in the southern part of the Romanian capital Bucharest, in Sector 5, near Berceni and Ferentari. Like Berceni, Giurgiului has plenty of 10-storey blocks of flats that were built under Communist rule, starting with 1959–1964. The estimated population is between 30,000 ...
0xxx to 4xxx for larger cities, including the sectors of Bucharest (a postal code identifies a street address or small group of addresses) 5xxx to 6xxx for smaller cities (a single postal code, ending in '00', is allocated to an entire city) 7xxx for villages. A postal code is allocated to each village.
The square during the interwar period. In the left: the Sturdza Palace (1898-1901) by Iulius Reinicke, [1] on the right: the Building of the Public Officials Association (1900) by Nicolae Mihăescu [2] Victory Square after WW2 bombardments, during the Communist period A TR-85 tank in Victory Square during the Romanian Revolution of December 1989