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The complex will have 1,700 apartments ranging in size from 30 m 2 (320 sq ft) to 95 m 2 (1,020 sq ft), bounded by the streets of Cara Dušana, Zadužbinska and Šumadijska on the area of 6 ha (15 acres). The apartments will be spread in 8 buildings, with the total area of 200,000 m 2 (2,200,000 sq ft). Deadline for the Phase I of the project ...
Municipalities of the City of Belgrade are officially divided into local communities (Serbian: месна заједница / mesna zajednica). These are arbitrary administrative units which on occasion correspond to the neighbourhoods and suburbs located in a municipality, though usually they don't.
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 Municipality of Gornji Grad (pronounced [ˈɡoːɾnji ˈɡɾaːt] ⓘ; Slovene: Občina Gornji Grad) is a municipality in Slovenia. The seat of the municipality is the town of Gornji Grad. It lies on the Dreta River in the foothills of the Savinja Alps.
The district is located in the central part of the city and, according to the 2011 census, it has 30,962 inhabitants [1] spread over 10.19 km 2 (3.93 sq mi). [2] Gornji Grad–Medveščak is a district with a high number of historic sites and tourist attractions.
Gornji Grad (literally, 'upper castle' or 'upper town') may refer to: Gornji Grad, Gornji Grad, a settlement in Slovenia and the eponym of the Municipality of Gornji Grad; Gornji Grad, Zagreb, a historic district of the Croatian capital, also known as Gradec, and the eponym of the modern-day district of Gornji Grad–Medveščak
Only 6%, or 150, are named after women. New Communist authorities after 1945 changed the names of 160 streets in Belgrade's central area. After democratic change in 2000, 267 names from the Communist period were changed or restored to their original, pre-war names. In total, over 500 streets received new or changed names in the 2004–2008 ...
Deadline is also 2 years, but the works will start at the end of 2018. This means that the planned Belgrade railway junction won't be finished before 2021, at best. However, minister for transportation, Zorana Mihajlović, in December 2017 gave conflicting deadlines. For the Zemun station, she said that it should be finished by the end of 2018 ...