Detelinara (, from Serbian detelina - clover, hence Detelinara = Field of Clovers) is an urban neighborhood of the city of Novi Sad, Serbia.
The south-eastern borders of Detelinara are Ulica Branka BajiÃÂa (Branko BajiÃÂ Street) and Ulica BraÃÂe PopoviÃÂ (BraÃÂe PopoviÃÂ Street), the north-eastern border is RumenaÃÂka ulica (RumenaÃÂka Street), the northern border is Ulica OblaÃÂiÃÂa Rada (OblaÃÂiÃÂa Rada Street), and the western border is Bulevar Evrope (Boulevard of Europe), built in the last quarter of 2009.
The neighbouring city quarters are: Novo Naselje and JugoviÃÂevo in the west, AvijatiÃÂarsko Naselje in the north, Sajmià ¡te in the south-east, and Banatiàand Industrijska Zona Jug in the north-east.
Detelinara is divided into Stara Detelinara (Old Detelinara) and Nova Detelinara (New Detelinara). The border between these two parts of the settlement is Ulica Kornelija StankoviÃÂa (Kornelije StankoviÃÂ Street). Old Detelinara is located on the southern side of this Street, while New Detelinara is located on the northern side. But due to rapid construction of new apartment buildings on the southern side in practice, the southern side is called New and the northern Old.
The FK Novi Sad stadium holds 6.000 people.
Between 1980 and 1989, Detelinara was one of the seven municipalities of Novi Sad City. The municipality included the city quarters of Detelinara, Sajmià ¡te, BanatiÃÂ, AvijatiÃÂarsko Naselje, JugoviÃÂevo, Industrijska Zona Jug, Industrijska Zona Sever, Gornje Livade and Rimski à  anÃÂevi, and the villages of Rumenka, KisaÃÂ, and StepanoviÃÂevo.
During bombing of Novi Sad in 1999, NATO bombs devastated civilian residential buildings on the Ulica ÃÂule Molnara (Djule Molnara street) and a school in Detelinara.
There were no human casualties. https://web.archive.org/web/20080715055324/http://www.vojvodina.com/gallery/detelinara/ http://www.vojvodina.com/arhiva/0510.htm