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from Wikipedia
Dedinje
Dedinje is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in the Belgrade's
municipality of Savski Venac. Dedinje is generally considered the wealthiest part of Belgrade, boasting numerous villas and mansions owned
by diplomats and top members of the city's organs of authority.
Dedinje is located on the eastern slopes of the hill of Topčidersko Brdo, 7-8 kilometers south of the downtown Belgrade to which it is
connected by Kneza Miloša Street. It borders the neighborhoods of Senjak (west), Prokop and Mostar (north), Stadion and Diplomatska
Kolonija (the Dedinje's sub-neighborhood in fact; east), Banjica, Lisičji Potok and Topčider (south). It is well connected to other parts
of Belgrade by several boulevards (Kneza Aleksandra Karađorđevića Blvd, Vojvode Putnika Blvd) and broad streets (Teodora Drajzera St,
Neznanog junaka St, etc). The main street in the neighborhood itself is Užička Street.
Senjak is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. Located in the Belgrade's
municipality of Savski Venac, it is an affluent and distinguished neighborhood rich in embassies and diplomatic residences.
Senjak is located 7-8 km south-west of downtown Belgrade, on top of a hilly, cliff-like crest of the western slopes of Topčidersko Brdo,
overlooking the Belgrade Fair right below and the Sava river (from which, at the closest point, Senjak is only 100 meters away).
It borders the neighborhoods of Topčider and Careva Ćuprija (south), Mostar (north), Prokop and Dedinje (east). The triangularly shaped
neighborhood has many small streets, but it is bounded by two wide boulevards named after the Serbian army vojvodas (dukes) from World War I:
Vojvoda Mišić and Vojvoda Putnik. Just like the neighboring Dedinje, Senjak is by Belgrade citizens considered one of the richest neighborhoods in the city.
Vračar is an urban neighborhood and one of the 17 municipalities which constitute
the City of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. With an area of only 297 hectares (734 acres), it is the smallest of all Belgrade's
(and Serbian) municipalities. The neighborhood of Vračar is located on the top of the Vračar plateau. Despite its small area,
being located less than a kilometer away from the downtown (Terazije) it borders many other Belgrade neighborhoods: the square
and neighborhood of Slavija to the north, Palilula to the northeast, Čubura and Gradić Pejton to the east, Neimar to the south
and the park and neighborhood of Karađorđev Park to the southwest. Vračar plateau is one of the highest points in the downtown
Belgrade built on a hilly terrain (32 hills altogether). Almost no geographical features exist today as the area is completely
urbanized except for the small section of Karađorđev Park on the southern slopes of the plateau. Some much larger parks such
as the major portion of Karađorđev Park or parks Manjež and Tašmajdan are to the left just outside the Vračar's administrative
borders. The most dominant feature of the modern Vračar is the massive Temple of Saint Sava.
Novi Beograd is one of the municipalities that constitute the City of Belgrade. The municipality
of Novi Beograd covers an area of 40.74 square kilometers (15.7 sq mi). The main physical characteristic of Novi Beograd is its flatness
that poses a high contrast to the Old Belgrade which is altogether built on 32 hills. It is located to the west of the 'Old' Belgrade to
which it is connected by five bridges (Gazela, Branko's bridge, Old Sava bridge, Old and New Railway Bridge) and the construction of the
sixth. The European route E75, with five grade separations including a new double-looped one at the Belgrade Arena, goes straight through
the middle of the settlement. Other structures include the convention and congress hall Sava Center, Genex condominiums,
NIS Petrol-Jugopetrol headquarters, sports and concert venues of Hala Sportova and Belgrade Arena, and 5-star hotels Continental Hotel
Belgrade and Hyatt Regency. Novi Beograd's local economy bounced back by switching to commercial facilities which comprise dozens of
shopping malls and many commercial zones. These activities have been further enhanced in the 2000s. The 'Open Shopping Mall' or the
Belgrade's flea market is also located in Novi Beograd.
Now over 1.2 million square meters is under construction in New Belgrade. An estimated value of construction in next two and a half
years will be over EUR 1.5 billion.
Banovo brdo is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located
in the Belgrade municipality of Čukarica. Banovo Brdo borders the neighborhoods of Čukarica to the west, Ada Ciganlija and Careva
Ćuprija to the north, Topčider and Košutnjak to the east, and Žarkovo and Julino Brdo to the south. Eastern parts of Banovo Brdo
are made up of two sub-neighborhoods, Golf Naselje and Sunčana Padina. Since the 1980s Požeška Street has been one of the busiest
streets in the city, gradually developing into one of the most prosperous trading and commercial parts of Belgrade. The uniqueness
of Banovo Brdo lies in the fact that it functions as a city within a city, with its own walking zone, a park and a commercial zone.
Voždovac is an urban neighborhood and one of the 17 municipalities
which constitute the City of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. The neighborhood of Voždovac is located 4-5 km south of downtown Belgrade,
on a hill in the northern part of the municipality. Three long, more or less parallel streets shape the neighborhood into an elongated
form in the north-west to south-east direction: western border is marked by the Boulevard of Liberation (which also makes the border to
the municipality of Savski Venac), eastern by Kumodraška Street, while Vojvode Stepe Street goes in between. Due to its shape, Voždovac
borders many other neighborhoods: Autokomanda to the north, Diplomatska Kolonija to the north-west, Banjica (and Banjica Forest) to the west,
Trošarina and Banjica. The western area along Boulevard of Liberation has become somewhat of an elitist neighborhood.
Slavija is one of the central town squares and an urban neighborhood of Belgrade,
the capital of Serbia. It is divided between the Belgrade's municipalities of Vračar and Savski Venac.
Terazije is designated as the centre of Belgrade. Terazije is also a short street, connected by
Kralja Milana Street, the main street in Belgrade, to the Slavija square; by the Nikola Pašić Square to Kralja Aleksandra Boulevard,
the longest street in Belgrade; by Prizrenska Street to the neighborhood of Zeleni Venac and further to Novi Beograd; and by Kolarčeva
Street to the Square of the Republic.
Kalemegdan is a fortress and a park in an urban area neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia.
It is located in the Belgrade's municipality of Stari Grad. Kalemegdan means "a castle square" in Turkish.
Skadarlija is a vintage street, an urban neighborhood, and a former municipality of Belgrade,
the capital of Serbia. It is located in the Belgrade municipality of Stari Grad (Old Town) and generally considered the main
bohemian quarter of Belgrade, treated as the Belgrade Montmartre. Skadarlija is located less than 300 metres north-west of Terazije,
central Belgrade. It begins right below the Republic Square and stretches along short, winding Skadarska Street. Being one of
the most famous streets in Belgrade, it is less than 400 metres long. It connects Despot Stefan Boulevard and ends at
Dušanova Street, near the Bajloni open green market and the Mira Trailović Square, where it extends into the neighborhood of Dorćol.