Stari Grad, Belgrade
Stari Grad is a municipality of the city of Belgrade. It encompasses some of the oldest sections of urban Belgrade, thus the name. Stari Grad is one of the three municipalities that occupy the very center of Belgrade, together with Savski Venac and Vračar.
History
Despite some of the oldest sections of Belgrade belong to Stari Grad, the municipality itself is among the latest urban ones formed administratively. It was formed by the merger of the municipality of Skadarlija and part of the municipality of Terazije on January 1, 1957.Geography
Stari Grad occupies the ending ridge of Šumadija geological bar. The cliff-like ridge, where the fortress of Kalemegdan is located, overlooks the Great War Island and the confluence of the Sava river into the Danube, and makes one of the most beautiful natural lookouts in Belgrade. With Novi Beograd, it is one of 2 municipalities of Belgrade which occupy the banks of both major rivers in Belgrade, the Sava and the Danube.The municipality of Stari Grad covers an area of just and borders the municipalities of Paliula on the east, Vračar on the south-east and Savski Venac on the south. The Sava makes a border to the municipality of Novi Beograd and the Danube to the municipalities of Zemun and the Banat's section of Palilula.
The riverside of the Danube has two distinct artificial bays, the small marina and the Port of Belgrade.
Neighborhood
The neighborhood of Stari Grad is not generally considered by the Belgraders as one single definitive neighborhood. Area which Stari Grad covers is either simply styled "downtown" or by the names of the more established neighborhood which it overlaps: Two parts of Dorćol separated on social-difference and architecture basis, It spreads from the bank of Danube by the Kalemegdan fortress to the Republic Square also known as "The Horse". Downtown Belgrade is most populated area which makes it the heart of the city, it spreads from Terazije down to Despot Stefan Boulevard. Tasmajdan neighborhood is along with Šipka the on the east side of Stari grad next to municipality of Palilula.This is a list of the neighborhoods in the municipality:
- Andrićev Venac
- Dorćol
- Jalija
- Jevremovac
- Kalemegdan
- Kopitareva Gradina
- Kosančićev Venac
- London
- Nikola Pašić Square
- Republic Square
- Skadarlija
- Stari Grad
- Studentski Trg
- Terazije
- Terazijska Terasa
- Varoš Kapija
Demographics
Even though residential areas are much densely compact compared to Vračar, the latter is densely populated because almost one third of Stari Grad, even though it is "heart" of Belgrade is not inhabited. However, a number of people working on the territory of the municipality doubles its own population and makes possible for the municipality of Stari Grad to achieve GDP per capita 6 to 8 times higher than the average in Serbia.
Ethnic structure
The ethnic composition of the municipality:Ethnic group | Population |
Serbs | 43,208 |
Yugoslavs | 613 |
Montenegrins | 441 |
Croats | 268 |
Macedonians | 203 |
Gorani | 156 |
Romani | 116 |
Muslims | 97 |
Slovenians | 84 |
Russians | 68 |
Albanians | 63 |
Hungarians | 53 |
Bosniaks | 40 |
Romanians | 35 |
Slovaks | 34 |
Germans | 31 |
Bulgarians | 28 |
Others | 2,912 |
Total | 48,450 |
Administration
Recent presidents of the municipality:- 1992 – 2000: Jovan Kažić
- 2000 – 2012: Mirjana Božidarević
- 2012 – 2016: Dejan Kovačević
- 2016 – present: Marko Bastać
Economy
Activity | Total |
Agriculture, forestry and fishing | 60 |
Mining and quarrying | 32 |
Manufacturing | 3,192 |
Electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply | 753 |
Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities | 252 |
Construction | 1,592 |
Wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles | 7,643 |
Transportation and storage | 2,704 |
Accommodation and food services | 4,719 |
Information and communication | 6,875 |
Financial and insurance activities | 3,735 |
Real estate activities | 457 |
Professional, scientific and technical activities | 7,731 |
Administrative and support service activities | 6,201 |
Public administration and defense; compulsory social security | 3,514 |
Education | 5,269 |
Human health and social work activities | 2,136 |
Arts, entertainment and recreation | 3,074 |
Other service activities | 2,397 |
Individual agricultural workers | 9 |
Total | 62,346 |
Features
Administration
- Presidency of the Republic
- National Assembly of Serbia
- Belgrade City Assembly
Economy and tourism
- Port of Belgrade; City's general urban plan from 1972 projected the removal of the Port of Belgrade and the industrial facilities by 2021. The cleared area was to encompass the Danube's bank from the Dorćol to the Pančevo bridge. At that time, the proposed new locations included the Veliko Selo marsh or the Reva 2 section of Krnjača, across the Danube. When the GUP was revised in 2003, it kept the idea od relocating the port and the industry, and as the new location only Krnjača was mentioned. There was an idea that the already existing port of Pančevo, after certain changes, could become the new Belgrade's port, but the idea was abandoned.
- Large industrial zone on the riverside of the Danube, surrounding the port
- BEKO clothing factory
- Belgrade Fortress with the Kalemegdan park
- Botanical garden of Jevremovac
- Belgrade Zoo
- Prince Michael Street
- Bohemian quarter of Skadarlija
- Aleksandar Palas *****
- Hotel Majestic ****
- Hotel Palace ****
- Le Petit Piaf ***
- Hotel Royal ***
Culture
- Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts
- Museum of Applied Arts
- National Museum of Serbia
- Konak Kneginje Ljubice
- Serbian Orthodox Church Museum
- Military Museum
- Museum of Belgrade Fortress
- Museum of Ethnography
- Museum of Pedagogy
- Museum of the City of Belgrade
- Museum of Theatrical Arts of Serbia
- Jewish Historical Museum
- Museum of Vuk and Dositej
- Museum of Automobiles ; the building was constructed in 1929 and was the first purposely built public garage in the city. It was designed by the Russian émigré architect Valery Stashevsky. It was a modern facility for the period, and included the gas station in the front while the hall included the repair shop, had central heating and ventilation. The façade is designed in the way that it simulated a regular residential house. Though it is only a ground-floor hall, it has two-storey windows. There are two pairs of windows on each side of the main entrance and a glass lunette above it. After World War II, the facility was used by the Radio Television Belgrade for their vehicle fleet. Bratislav Petković began parking classic cars in the garage in 1994 and in time it grew into the museum while the building was placed under the state protection. In September 2019 it was announced that the open air garage for the vehicles of the Ministry of the Interior under the Branko's Bridge will be adapted in two museum, one of which will be the relocated Museum of Automobiles. The building in Majke Jevrosime Street, known as the Modern Garage, will be returned to the pre-World War II owners in the process of the Restitution. The larger area will allow for more than 50 cars to be exhibited, which is the number of cars displayed at the present museum.
- PTT museum ; built from 1926 to 1930 and designed by, with its specific red-white façade, it is considered one of the most beautiful buildings constructed in Belgrade during the Interbellum; it was built as the administrative building for the Post Office company and today it is a postal museum.
Education
- Elementary school "Stari Grad"; founded in 1961 and originally named "1st Proletarian Brigade", with 1,300 pupils it was the largest school in this part of Belgrade. It was among the first schools in Belgrade which got a large library, day care, electronic classrooms, etc. As the population of Stari Grad dwindled, so did the number of pupils. Since the early 2010s, city administration considered to close the school. In March 2016 city announced the closing which provoked opposition from the pupils who organized petition in downtown to keep the school, followed by the joint protests of the pupils, their parents and teachers. The school was preserved for a year, but as the number of pupils fell to 142, in June 2017 city finally decided to resettle the pupils in the neighboring schools and to move the Sports Gymnasium in its building.
Healthcare
Dva Bela Goluba
Up to the 1860s, this area was uninhabited. Jovan Kujundžić, a tailor had a ground floor house at the modern crossroad of the Makedonska, Svetogorska, Hilandarska and Cetinjska streets. He switched to the catering business and founded a kafana Dva bela goluba. Originally, it was a typical road meyhane. The kafana became so famous, that the entire neighborhood and the modern Svetogorska Street, were named after it in 1872. By the end of the 19th century, the neighborhood gradually developed along the central street and became fully urbanized, as a direct, eastern extension of the city's downtown.In the late 1920s, the Artisan Guild purchased the house and the surrounding lot in order to build the Home of the Artisans, which is today the building of the Radio Belgrade. Kujundžić had one condition, that the name is to be preserved. Because of that, above the entrance into the building, the sculptural composition was carved. It shows two persons with an anvil, next to the anvil are scissors, with two white doves. The kafana was moved to the Bohemian quarter of Skadarlija and the name for the neighborhood fell into oblivion.
The neighborhood remains a location of several important buildings which were declared a cultural monuments and protected by law:
- Jevrem Grujić's House
- House of Dr. Stanoje Stanojević
- Uroš Predić's Studio
- Commercial Academy Building
- Artisans Club Building
- Building of Ljubomir Miladinović
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Stari Grad is twinned with:- Yermasoyia, Cyprus
- Kotor, Montenegro
- Staré Mesto, Bratislava, Slovakia
- Centar, Skopje, North Macedonia
- Erzsébetváros, Budapest, Hungary
- Belgrade, Namur, Belgium
- Bitola Municipality, Bitola, North Macedonia