Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Tempo store in Ada was the first store to be renamed Mega Maxi, followed by those in Niš, Čačak and Kragujevac. The remaining stores were renamed in 2023. [2] In December 2021, Tempo store in Novi Sad caught fire. At the time, a dozen of customers were in the store, but no one was injured. [3] [4] Reconstruction works begun in March 2023 ...
Delhaize Serbia (full legal name: Delhaize Serbia d.o.o. Beograd) or Delhaize Maxi, is a Serbian supermarket chain owned by Ahold Delhaize, with headquarters in Belgrade. Founded in 2000, the chain has around 482 stores in Serbia. [4] As of 2016, it has 20.60% market share in Serbia. [5]
Robne kuće Beograd company was founded in 1965 and soon became the largest supermarket chain in former SFR Yugoslavia, and third largest chain in Europe. [3] [4] In 1970, it opened a store in the capital city of Belgrade that opened 24 hours a day, the first such store in SFR Yugoslavia. [5]
Map of the District Dayton boundary lines before the formation of the Brčko District. Brčko District (Serbo-Croatian: Brčko Distrikt / Брчко Дистрикт), officially the Brčko District of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Serbo-Croatian: Brčko Distrikt Bosne i Hercegovine / Брчко Дистрикт Босне и Херцеговине), is a self-governing administrative unit in north ...
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
Studentski Trg is located halfway between the Republic Square (to the east) and the Kalemegdan park-fortress (to the west). It is adjacent to the Academy Park.To the north it extends into the neighborhood of (Upper) Dorćol, while the pedestrian zone of Knez Mihailova is located to the south.
Roda (Serbian Cyrillic: Рода, lit. 'Stork') is a chain of retail stores that began operating in 1994 by opening its first location in Kula.By developing a retail network of megamarkets, first in Vojvodina, and then throughout Serbia, Roda positioned itself as a store for large and family purchases.
Bulevar kralja Aleksandra (Serbian Cyrillic: Булевар краља Александра, "King Alexander Boulevard") is the longest street entirely within the urban limits of Serbian capital Belgrade, with length of 7.5 kilometers. [1]