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  2. Sarajevo City Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarajevo_City_Center

    Sarajevo City Center (SCC) is a business complex and shopping center in downtown Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, that consists of three main parts: a shopping mall and leisure complex; a five star hotel tower; and a commercial offices tower, with a common 4-story underground parking area with more than 1100 parking spaces.

  3. Centar, Sarajevo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centar,_Sarajevo

    Centar (Cyrillic: Центар, lit. ”Center") is a municipality of the city of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.It is located between the older parts of the city under Stari Grad, and the newer more modern parts of the city under the municipalities Novi Grad and Novo Sarajevo.

  4. Novo Sarajevo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novo_Sarajevo

    It is located in the middle of the Sarajevo field, predominantly on the northern bank of the Miljacka, between Novi Grad and Centar. Prior to the siege, Novo Sarajevo had some 47.6 km 2 (41.6% Forest, 17.5% Meadows, 13.5% Commercial/Building Land, 10.4% Grass-land, 8.4% Ploghland, 13.5% Gardens).

  5. Centar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centar

    Centar may refer to: Centar Municipality (Skopje), a part of Skopje, North Macedonia; Centar Municipality, Sarajevo, a part of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina; Centar, Niš, a neighbourhood of Niš, Serbia; Centar (Croatian political party), a liberal party in Croatia; Centar, Sisak, a section of Sisak, Croatia

  6. Novi Grad, Sarajevo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novi_Grad,_Sarajevo

    During the 1970s, Sarajevo was undergoing a rapid economic and cultural development, with great expansion focused on population and industry.Novi Grad was a direct result of this period of heavy growth, in which many acres of previously unused land were transformed into socialist urban centres filled with apartment buildings.

  7. Grbavica (Sarajevo) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grbavica_(Sarajevo)

    On its north-west corner, the new British Embassy Sarajevo has been built. [2] Grbavica II, between Grbavica I and Hrasno, hosts the Grbavica Shopping Centre and the Ummu Arif Zabadne Mosque. South of Zagrebačka street are Grbavica Stadium, home of FK Željezničar, and the Catholic Church of St. Ignatius (Crkva Sv.Ignacija Lojolskog).

  8. Butmir Training Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butmir_Training_Centre

    The Football Club Sarajevo - Butmir Training Centre (Bosnian: Trening centar Fudbalskog kluba Sarajevo - Butmir; Cyrillic: Тренинг центар Фудбалског клуба Сарајево - Бутмир) is a compound consisting a number of sport facilities, serving as a training ground for FK Sarajevo.

  9. Marijin Dvor (Sarajevo) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marijin_Dvor_(Sarajevo)

    The Holiday Inn Sarajevo was the home of foreign correspondents during the 1984 Winter Olympics and throughout the siege of Sarajevo during the Bosnian War. The UNITIC Twin Skyscrapers were built in the 1980s. They were colloquially named "Momo and Uzeir" after two characters from a radio comedy show, a Serb and a Bosniak.