Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sculpture by Sir Antony Gormley outside DS Smith's former head office in Euston Road. DS Smith is a leading provider of sustainable fibre-based packaging in Europe and the United States, with recycling and papermaking operations. The company manufactures packaging that is 100% recyclable, and has sites in 37 countries. [15]
Shopping mall City Opened Status Notes GLA m 2; Galerija Belgrade: Belgrade: 2020: Opened [1]93,000 Promenada Shopping Center: Novi Sad: 2018: Opened [2]48,000 Ušće Shopping Center
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Knez Mihailova Street (Serbian: Кнез Михаилова улица, romanized: Knez Mihailova ulica, officially: Улица кнеза Михаила, Ulica kneza Mihaila) is the main pedestrian and shopping zone in Belgrade, and is protected by law as one of the oldest and most valuable landmarks of the city.
Slavija is located less than 1.5 km (0.93 mi) south of Terazije (downtown Belgrade), at an altitude of 117 m (384 ft). [2] The square itself belongs entirely to the municipality of Vračar, though the municipality of Savski Venac begins immediately to the west.
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 ...
The first proposals to establish formal diplomatic relations and open the embassy in Belgrade came as early as September 1992, during talks between Croatian President Franjo Tuđman and FR Yugoslavia's President Dobrica Ćosić. [1]
The name of the square has been the subject of much debate in the city. Vuk Drašković of the Serbian Renewal Movement suggested the square be renamed to Freedom Square (Трг Слободе / Trg Slobode) after pro-democracy demonstrations were held in the square to oust Slobodan Milosević on 9 March 1991, during the 1991 protests in Belgrade. [1]