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The tallest building in Albania is Downtown One (150m), in Bulgaria is Rousse TV Tower (204m), in Croatia is Dalmatia Tower (135m), in Romania is Floreasca City Center (137m), in Serbia is Belgrade Tower (168m), in Slovenia is Crystal Palace (89m), in Kosovo is Pristina City Center (125m), in North Macedonia is Cevahir Towers (130m) and the ...
Tallest skyscraper in Belgrade and Serbia between 1979 and 2021, and the Balkans between 1979 and 1993. 5 Ušće Tower 1: Belgrade: 115 metres (377 ft) 27 1964 (reconstructed in 2005) Height of the roof - 115m, with antenna 141m. Tallest skyscraper in Belgrade, Serbia and the Balkans between 1964 and 1979. 6 Ušće Tower 2: Belgrade: 104 metres ...
Map of Serbia. This is a list of municipalities in Serbia which have standing links to local communities in other countries known as "town twinning" (usually in Europe) or "sister cities" (usually in the rest of the world).
Belgrade Tower (Serbian: Кула Београд, romanized: Kula Beograd), officially known as Kula Belgrade, is a 42-floor, 168-meter (551 ft) tall skyscraper as part of the Belgrade Waterfront project in Belgrade, Serbia.
Belgrade Waterfront (Serbian: Београд на води / Beograd na vodi, lit. ' Belgrade on the Water '), is an urban renewal development project headed by the Government of Serbia aimed at changing Belgrade's cityscape and economy by gentrifying the Sava amphitheater, between the Belgrade Fair and Branko's bridge, including the Savamala neihgbourhood.
FIAT Chrysler Automobiles Serbia Kragujevac Cannon Foundry in 1856. Kragujevac has been an important industrial and trading centre of Serbia for more than two centuries, known for its automotive and firearms industries. The former state-owned Zastava Automobiles company was purchased by Fiat in 2008, and new company, FCA Srbija, was established ...
Map of Local communities in Novi Beograd. 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.
With other kafanas being closed or relocated to Skadarlija, and closing of the most popular "Velika Srbija" inn in 1905 to make place for the Hotel Moskva in Terazije, by c.1910 Skadarlija became to central point of Belgrade's bohemianism. [13] The end section of Skadarlija is known as the Skadarlija atrium.