Kalenić, Belgrade

Kalenić
Црвени Крст
Urban neighbourhood
Kalenić Greenmarket
Kalenić
Location within Belgrade
Coordinates: 44°48′00″N 20°28′31″E / 44.80000°N 20.47528°E / 44.80000; 20.47528Coordinates: 44°48′00″N 20°28′31″E / 44.80000°N 20.47528°E / 44.80000; 20.47528
Country  Serbia
Region Belgrade
Municipality Vračar
Time zone UTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST) UTC+2 (CEST)
Area code +381(0)11
Car plates BG

Kalenić (Serbian Cyrillic: Каленић, Serbo-Croatian pronunciation: [kǎle̞nit͡ɕ]) is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in Belgrade's municipality of Vračar, centered on the Kalenić market, one of the main open greenmarkets in Belgrade.

Location

Kalenić is located 2 kilometers south-east of downtown Belgrade (Terazije), on the northern slopes of the Vračar hill. It extends into the neighborhoods of Čubura on the south, Crveni Krst on the east, Vukov Spomenik on the north and Krunski Venac on the west, in the direction of Cvetni Trg.

Characteristics

Kalenić is a busy commercial and residential area, a commercial and administrative center of the municipality as the building of the Municipal Assembly of Vračar is also located here. It is also one of the main traffic routes in the city, but as the neighborhood is older one, the streets are mostly narrow which causes traffic jams on daily basis (streets of Maksima Gorkog, Golsvordijeva, Krunska, etc.).

For several decades, Kalenić was administratively organized as a local community (mesna zajednica), a sub-municipal administrative unit within Vračar. It had a population of 7,442 in 1981 and 6,815 in 1991.[1][2]

A kafana named Kalenić is located in the neighborhood. It was open in 1938 and purchased by an engineer Adolf Sabo a year later. Sabo perished in Holocaust and the restaurant was nationalized. In May 2018, during the Restitution Law, the ownership of the Kalenić was transferred to the Belgrade's Jewish municipality, as Sabo had no living descendants. As Kalenić is today one of the famous Belgrade kafanas and is considered a "symbol of Vračar", Jewish community stated that the kafana will continue to work.[3][4]

Kalenić market

Kalenić market or Kalenićeva pijaca (Serbian: Каленићева пијаца) was founded in 1926. That year, the central city market, the Great Market, was finally closed and city founded several new markets throughout the city, further from the downtown: Zeleni Venac, Kalenić, Bajloni and Jovanova market.[5][6] It was built on the lot known as Kalenića gumno (Kalenić threshing floor), hence the name of the market. Originally it covered only 500 m2 (5,400 sq ft), but it grew in time.[7]

It is one of the most vibrant, popular open-air markets in Belgrade, and sees hundreds of shoppers each day. Stalls are roughly grouped according to their wares, and primarily feature locally-produced seasonal fruits, vegetables, artisanal cheeses, and a range of homemade baked goods, pickles, jams and fruit preserves. Concentrated in the centre and along one far wall are self-contained shops selling all types of meats (fresh and smoked) and fish; tucked in among these is a healthfood store well-stocked with everything from soymilk to organic tofu and dried seaweed. Imported condiments, sauces and chocolate drink mixes can also be found.

Kalenić features much more than just food: a vast range of fresh-cut flowers and potted plants are concentrated near a secondary entrance; new sleepwear, socks and underwear are sold at stalls which also carry second-hand shoes, sweaters and furs; antique housewares are dotted throughout the market, as are religious candles and Orthodox icons; batteries, laundry soap, lightbulbs, replacement vacuum bags, inexpensive pots and pans line another of its interior walls. It also features the gauntlet of pet stalls selling puppies, rabbits, small birds, fish and turtles out front. High-quality Serbian fast food shops ring its outer wall.

Reconstruction

The market was scheduled to be reconstructed and remodelled in Spring 2008 with completion in early 2009. The redevelopment will create Belgrade's second high quality market with closed and open areas and extended facilities. During the works the market will be relocated to a park alongside the present site.

However, full reconstruction began only on 26 March 2016. It was projected to consist of 4 phases and to last for 2 years. The idea of covering the market, either with the roof or glass, was abandoned.[8] But by 2017 citizens showed dislike of the changes and pointed to the poor quality of the works.[9] In October 2017, city company publicly addressed the criticism in an offensive manner. Some of the architects joined the criticism, saying that the rows of a new, black tin shops which encircle the market, resemble the funeral homes. The reconstruction was labeled as the "pinnacle of a mess, chaos, lack of taste and functionality" in the "devastation of Vračar".[10]

References

  1. Osnovni skupovi stanovništva u zemlji – SFRJ, SR i SAP, opštine i mesne zajednice 31.03.1981, tabela 191. Savezni zavod za statistiku (txt file). 1983.
  2. Stanovništvo prema migracionim obeležjima – SFRJ, SR i SAP, opštine i mesne zajednice 31.03.1991, tabela 018. Savezni zavod za statistiku (txt file).
  3. Miloš Lazić (12 June 2018). ""Kalenić" za sva vremena - Kafana po glavi stanovnika" ["Kalenić" for all seasons - Kafana per capita]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 15.
  4. V. Crnjanski Spasojević (30 May 2018). ""Kalenić" jevrejskoj zajednici" ["Kalenić" (returned) to the Jewish community]. Večernje Novosti (in Serbian).
  5. D.J.S. (13 December 2014), "Pijace slave Svetog Andreja Prvozvanog", Politika (in Serbian), p. 15
  6. Dragan Perić (23 April 2017), "Šetnja pijacama i parkovima", Politika-Magazin No 1021 (in Serbian), pp. 28–29
  7. Dragan Perić (22 October 2017), "Beogradski vremeplov - Pijace: mesto gde grad hrani selo" [Belgrade chronicles - greenmarkets: a place where village feeds the city], Politika-Magazin, No. 1047 (in Serbian), pp. 26–27
  8. "Počela rekonstrukcija Kalenić pijace" [Reconstruction of the Kalenić market began] (in Serbian). Blic. 26 March 2016.
  9. Mira Mircevski (30 September 2017), "Arhitektonski promašaji na beogradskim pijacama" [Architectural misfires in Belgrade greenmarkets], Politika (in Serbian)
  10. Miroslav Simeunović (24 October 2017), "Devastiranje Vračara" [Devastation of Vračar], Politika (in Serbian), p. 27
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.