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Belgrade – Construction work has been completed on the layout of the Sava promenade from the concrete hall to the Branko bridge.
Source: B92
Photo: Goran Vesić / Facebook
“We started reconstruction work on the Sava pier from the Branko Bridge to the end of the Concrete Hall in December last year,” wrote the Deputy Mayor of the City of Belgrade, Goran Vesić, on his Facebook profile.
The works were carried out on an area of about two hectares, of which the pedestrian zones occupy around 1.38 hectares, the green areas around 0.5 hectares and a 2,200 square meter bike path. The pedestrian surfaces are paved with stone slabs, in three shades, and a 2.5 meter wide bike path has been made, which is part of the Dorcol-Ada Ciganlija cycling corridor.
“I carried out the construction of that road in 1997 as a member of the Executive Board of the City Assembly. The idea for the construction of the then first bicycle lane was proposed by Đoka Vještica and the then mayor Zoran Đinđić,” Vesić wrote.
Half a hectare of green areas will be adorned with grass and 60 new trees of different types of seedlings, 199 pieces of shrubs and more than 5,000 pieces of ornamental plants.
Vesić has announced that in the next two weeks the construction of the staircase to Karađorđeva Street next to the Captaincy will be completed, and urban and decorative furniture will be installed, which is stylistically and visually harmonized with paved surfaces, posters and information panels, as well as elements of public and decorative lighting.
“We will install 40 stone and steel benches covered with wood, solar wood for charging mobile phones, garbage cans, a bicycle parking comb and information panels. In two weeks, we will install accessories for children to play in the new playground.” wrote Goran Vesić.
A monument to Diana Budisavljevic will be erected on the rebuilt Sava Quay, and the Port Worker monument will be moved from the existing location to the location next to the Captaincy.
“Belgrade residents remember what Sava Quay was like until just a year ago, with cars, cracked asphalt, illegal cafes, no benches, and no space for children to play. Now the space from Concrete Hall to Branko’s Bridge is so arranged that they would envy us. “Many European capitals. Belgrade deserves to be a modern and orderly European city. That is exactly what it has become in recent years, “Vesic wrote.
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