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Resnik is predominantly a residential settlement. It is close to important traffic routes: the valley of Rakovički potok is a route to the Kružni put, suburban road of Belgrade and the future part of the projected Belgrade beltway, and a Belgrade-Požarevac railway, while the valley of Topčiderka is a route to the Belgrade-Niš railway.
Construction began in 1978 and the facility became operational in 1981. The entire crematory complex covers 4.4 ha (11 acres). Though not the oldest crematory in Serbia (Belgrade New Cemetery had one since 1963-1964), for a while it was the only operational one in Serbia, until 2005 when another one was open in Novi Sad. [4] [5]
Belgrade is the financial centre of Serbia and Southeast Europe, with a total of 17 × 10 ^ 6 m 2 (180 × 10 ^ 6 sq ft) of office space. [155] It is also home to the country's Central Bank . 750,550 people are employed (July 2020) [ 156 ] in 120,286 companies, [ 157 ] 76,307 enterprises and 50,000 shops.
It is situated 18 km (11 mi) southwest of Surčin, its municipal seat, and 34 km (21 mi) from Belgrade, roughly at Sava's 45 km (28 mi). Local roads connect Progar with the villages of Kupinovo, on the west, and Boljevci, on the east. [2] [3] [4] Progar also marks the order of the administrative territory of the City of Belgrade in this section.
Ledine is the westernmost settlement in the municipality, formerly developed as a sort of an informal settlement outside the projected area of the city of New Belgrade. Today it is urbanistically connected to the neighborhoods of Bežanija and Dr Ivan Ribar by the narrow urban strip along Vionogradska and Surčinska streets.
Originally intended as the western extension of Krnjača (and officially part of it until 1971 when Krnjača lost a status of the separate settlement and became part of the Belgrade City proper itself), it was constructed west of the Zrenjaninski put road which connects the cities of Belgrade and Zrenjanin, without urbanistic connection to any other neighborhoods.
Info This map is part of a series of location maps with unified standards: SVG as file format, standardised colours and name scheme. The boundaries on these maps always show the de facto situation and do not imply any endorsement or acceptance.
Until the 1970s, Žarkovo was a suburb of Belgrade, a separate, extremely fast growing town (population 1961: 8,636; 1971: 28,761), so it was administratively annexed to the Belgrade City proper, becoming local community within the city, and an extensive development of the border neighborhoods in the 1970s and 1980s (Banovo Brdo, Sunčana ...