Yuri Gagarin Street, Belgrade
Yuri Gagarin Street (Serbian: Улица Јурија Гагарина, Ulica Jurija Gagarina) is a major street in New Belgrade, named after Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space.
The Jurija Gagarina serves as an informal boundary of the north and south Blokovi neighbourhoods of New Belgrade.
Notable features
- Delta City, shopping-mall in Block 67
- ENJUB Center, in Block 45
- "20. oktobar", school in Block 70
- Elementary school "Užička republika", in Block 62
- Elementary school "Branko Radičević", in Block 45
- Pijaca (greenmarket), in Block 44
- Piramida (the Pyramide), shopping center in Block 44
- "Chinese center (kineski centar)/Blok 70 center", shopping center in Block 70
Buvljak
Buvljak, Belgrade's largest flea market is located in Jurija Gagarina street. Officially named "Open Trade Center", it is colloquially called Buvljak, a generic short term for that type of markets (Serbian: buvlja pijaca).
Location
The market is located along the north side of the street, stretching to the New Belgrade Railway Station, in the initial section of the street. It occupies the southwest corner of the Block 43. South of Buvljak, across the Yuri Gagarin street, is the neighborhood of Savski Nasip, while the Block 42 on the west separates it from Belville.[1] The market is partially encircled by the above-ground access road to the Ada Bridge, and the adjoining interchange.
History
Buvljak was opened in 1994 and with an area of 43,000 m2 (460,000 sq ft) was the largest such facility in Serbia. For the first year and a half, the marked basically worked only on weekends.[2] In 1997, the row of shops was constructed to follow the rim of the market, while the plateau inside was equipped with 1,000 market stalls. By 1999, due to the Sanctions against Serbia, the flea market accommodated over 300,000 customers during the weekends. A special bus tours were organized from all over Serbia to specifically bring customers to Buvljak. After the Chinese Shopping Mall was opened in the Block 70, the revenues fell by 30-40%. When the construction of the access road to the bridge began, the central plateau was reorganized in 2010 and now has 787 stalls on 23,190 m2 (249,600 sq ft).[2] Though all sorts of commodities can be found (food, plastic products, car gear and spare parts, consumer electronics, dishes, household items), the most abundant are the stalls with cloths and footwear.[3]
Future
The Block 42 is projected as the location of the future Belgrade's main bus station, so the city's General Urban Plan envisioned the displacement of the market. The section where the market is located at the moment is planned for the shopping mall and a business building, 65 to 100 m (213 to 328 ft) high. Even though the removal was scheduled for 2017 and was later postponed to 2018, the new location of Buvljak is not yet known. Possible sites include areas in other parts of New Belgrade, like those just south across the Yuri Gagarin street (Savski Nasip) or at the westernmost section of the municipality, in the neighborhood of Dr Ivan Ribar. Also, sections of other municipalities, like Zemun or Voždovac, are being considered. New Buvljak is envisioned as the modern retail park, rather than the old style flea market. It should cover an area of 32,000 m2 (340,000 sq ft), with 1,000 stalls of 7.5 m2 (81 sq ft). All stalls will be mobile, with electricity, and will be closed by the roll up doors. The entire facility will be encircled with the 5 km (3.1 mi) long green wall, while inside it will have wide paved pedestrian paths with green avenues and a covered central square with restaurants and coffee shops.[3] On 14 July 2017, mayor of Belgrade Siniša Mali announced that dislocation of the market will not start before 2019 and hinted it will remain on New Belgrade.[4]
Belgrade Central Bus Station
Block 42
Western section of Block 42 since 2009 was settled as the informal settlement colloquially named Romville which was, somewhat forcefully, resettled on 26 April 2012.[5]
From then on, in the eastern section of the block, right across the Buvljak, a wild market developed. A section was fenced in 2010, so the market moved to the south, closer to Buvljak. In the fenced area, on the corner of Antifašističke borbe Street and Milutina Milankovića Boulevard, city administration decided to build a tourist attraction, called "Terazije 1930". It was envisioned as the theme park, replica of Belgrade's central square, Terazije during Interbellum. The park was never fully finished, remaining just a bunch of sets, and jokingly nicknamed the "Potemkin park". Even so, 72 million dinars (some 680,000 euros) were spent on the sets, and after the strong public reaction to the reports that the facility is illegally connected to the electric grid, the replica was torn down in 2015. Wild market immediately settled the area, until it was fenced again in 2016. Parking lot in the block, arranged when "Buvljak" was opened in 1994, was closed in August 2016. As intercity tourist buses also used the lot as the parking and terminus for several years, they were banned, too, two months later.[6]
Wild market which remained across "Buvljak" was completely unregulated, had no water or electricity, any order or market stalls as the goods are being sold from the cardboard boxes or directly of the ground. Because of that, and of the growing amount of garbage which surrounds it, the market has been colloquially called "Kolera" ("cholera").[7][8] In July 2017 the area was fenced in order to prevent both the selling on the lot and its usage as the parking lot for cars and buses, due to the impending construction of the bus station.[9]
Transport hub
For several years the project of dislocation of the city's main bus station (BAS), including the adjoining "Lasta" bus station, from the Savamala neighborhood to New Belgrade has been announced. Even set dates were given, followed by postponing: "Lasta" was to be dislocated by 2015 and BAS by 2018. Proposed location of the new station was Block 42, which stretches from the "Yuri Gagarin" to the New Belgrade's railway station (south-north) and between the Buvljak and Belville (east-west). In July 2017, when demolition of "Lasta" station began, city government announced that the new bus station will be finished by July 2019. A foundation stone is to be set by the end of 2017 and the works are projected to last for 18 months. The station is to be patterned after the Lisbon bus station and it is envisioned to have 135 platforms and 55 bus parking spots, with the total area of 13,000 m2 (140,000 sq ft). A public underground garage with 200 parking spots is also projected and, in order to accommodate over 1,200 buses daily, surrounding streets, including the "Yuri Gagarin", will receive an additional lane. Authors of the project are Milan and Vladimir Lojanica. The adjoining railway station will be renovated and expanded with the station building, new parking, etc., so together with the new bus station, they will make a new transport hub of Belgrade.[10] The first object in the complex is suppose to be the Annex, which, when everything is finished, will physically connect the bus and railway stations. Built under the Ada Bridge access roads, covering an area of 1,400 m (4,600 ft) and costing 140,4 million dinars (1,17 million euros), it should have been constructed between February and July 2017. Due to the delays caused by the problems with documentation and permits, works were moved to August-December 2017. It will serve as the temporary "Lasta" building until the entire complex is finished, when the building of the rest of the complex should start.[6]
On the location of the former Terazije replica, new railway building will be built and a 100 m (330 ft) tall commercial tower. The railway station will be fully reconstructed, with the new platforms with the number of tracks expanded to seven. A new parking with 200 spots will be built, too.[6]
References
- ↑ Beograd - plan i vodič. Geokarta. 1999. ISBN 86-459-0006-8.
- 1 2 Dragana Jokić Stamenković, Nikola Belić (16 June 2013), "Na „buvljaku” žale za devedesetim", Politika (in Serbian)
- 1 2 Ana Vuković, Daliborka Mučibabić (4 June 2017), "Buvljak čeka novu lokaciju i postaje „ritejl park”", Politika (in Serbian)
- ↑ Daliborka Mučibabić (15 July 2017), ""Buvljak" ostaje na istom mestu i sledeće godine", Politika (in Serbian), p. 15
- ↑ Nikola Belić (26 April 2012). "Romvil ispražnjen u jednom danu" (in Serbian). Politika.
- 1 2 3 Daliborka Mučibabić, Dejan Aleksić (6 August 2017), "Prvi objekat u decembru, ceo kompleks 2019.", Politika (in Serbian)
- ↑ "Buvljak zvani Kolera" (in Serbian). Telegraf.rs. 17 March 2016.
- ↑ Kolera u Beogradu
- ↑ Daliborka Mučibabić (26 July 2017), "Ogradom protiv enelgalne prodaje i šuta", Politika (in Serbian), p. 17
- ↑ Dejan Aleksić (5 July 2017), "Sa nove BAS-ove stanice od leta 2019. godine", Politika (in Serbian), p. 14
Coordinates: 44°48′04″N 20°22′20″E / 44.8010°N 20.3723°E