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  2. Museum of Broken Relationships - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Broken_Relationships

    The museum was founded by two Zagreb-based artists, Olinka Vištica, a film producer, and Dražen Grubišić, a sculptor. [5] After their four-year love relationship came to an end in 2003, the two joked about setting up a museum to house the left-over personal items. [6]

  3. Klovićevi Dvori Gallery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klovićevi_Dvori_Gallery

    It produces some 30 exhibitions every year and is one of the largest such institutions in the country. [ 3 ] In cooperation with Hungarian National Museum in Budapest , Gallery organised two joint exhibitions: on 800-years of joint cultural heritage in 2020 [ 5 ] and of 19-th century Croatian and Hungarian arts of painting in 2024, as a part of ...

  4. Ban Jelačić Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ban_Jelačić_Square

    In 1848, the square was renamed to its present name. [2] A large statue of Ban Josip Jelačić on a horse, created by Austrian sculptor Anton Dominik Fernkorn was installed on 19 October 1866 by Austrian authorities, despite protests from Zagreb councilmen. [citation needed] It also caused unease amongst Hungarians, who saw Jelačić as a traitor.

  5. St. Mark's Church, Zagreb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Mark's_Church,_Zagreb

    As the corner of St. Mark's Square and the present day Street of Ćiril and Metod, was a Town Hall, the seat of the city administration in medieval times. The building has gone through a number of alteration and reconstruction phases, and today this old Town Hall still keeps its doors open for the meetings of the Zagreb City Council. [7]

  6. Croatian History Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croatian_History_Museum

    In order to remedy this problem, the building of the Zagreb Tobacco Factory (Tvornica duhana Zagreb) was assigned to the museum in 2007, but as of 2015, the museum remains in Matoš Street. [2] The museum building was damaged in the 2020 Zagreb earthquake and remains closed to visitors as of 2021. [4]

  7. Zagreb Funicular - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zagreb_Funicular

    The Zagreb Funicular (Croatian: Zagrebačka uspinjača) is the funicular in Zagreb, Croatia, operated by ZET, situated in Tomić Street, connecting Ilica with Strossmayerovo šetalište (Strossmayer promenade) to the north (Gornji Grad). Its 66-metre (217 ft) track makes it one of the shortest public-transport funiculars in the world.