Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Zvezdara Forest today covers an area of 137 hectares, out of which 21 hectare is arranged as a park. [11] Apart from the observatory, objects within the forest or near it include the "Mihajlo Pupin Institute" in the north-central and seven small stadiums (FC 29. Novembar, FC Zvezdara, FC Mladi proleter) in the north-western section.
Zeleno Brdo is a local community, a sub-municipal administrative unit, within the municipality of Zvezdara. According to the censuses, it had a population of 10,343 in 1981, [ 7 ] 8,945 in 1991, [ 8 ] 9,819 in 2002 [ 9 ] and 11,408 in 2011.
The neighborhood developed in the valley of Mirijevski potok (creek which is a right tributary to the Danube, at the neighborhood of Rospi Ćuprija), between the Zvezdara hill in the west (253 meters), Orlovica hill (274 meters, read as Orlovitsa; on some city maps given as Orlovača) in the north-east and Stojčino hill (274 meters) in the ...
Zvezdara II This page was last edited on 24 May 2020, at 12:09 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional ...
In the 1930s, area of the modern Cvetkova Pijaca was the eastern edge of the city. Today, neighborhood is dominated by the open farmers' market, one of the major ones in Belgrade. The market, which originates from the late 1920s, [3] is actually officially called "Zvezdara
Zvezdara Forest (Serbian: Звездарска шума / Zvezdarska šuma) is a park-forest in Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. Majority of the forest is located in the municipality of Zvezdara with only the small northernmost section being on the territory of Palilula .
A northern sub-neighborhood of Zvezdara, today mostly centered on the roundabout of bus line number 65. It consists of several small urban patches in the northern section of Zvezdara Forest, north of the observatory and Mihajlo Pupin Institute and along the Dragoslava Srejovića street, which divides it from the neighborhoods of Karaburma and Ćalije on the north and north-east, respectively ...
Citing Yugoslavia's need for such a facility, which countries such as the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom already possessed, [4] specifically naming the Pulkovo and Greenwich Observatories, [2] in 1929 Mišković succeeded in getting funds for the constructions of a new modern observatory, 6 km (3.7 mi) southeast from the city centre, occupying a 4.5 ha (11 acres) area at 253 m (830 ft ...