Kanarevo brdo (, meaning "Kanar's Hill") is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in Belgrade's municipality of Rakovica.
Kanarevo Brdo is located in the northwestern section of the municipality, on the border of the municipality of Voà ¾dovac. It lies in the valley of the stream of Kaljavi potok, on its mouth into the TopÃÂiderka river. It is bordered by the neighborhoods of Banjica, TopÃÂider and LisiÃÂji Potok on the north, Koà ¡utnjak on the west, Rakovica on the southeast, Miljakovac I on the south and Miljakovac II on the east. The neighborhood is bounded by the streets of Patrijarha Dimitrija (west), Pere VelimiroviÃÂa (north) and Borska (east and south).
Kanarevo Brdo developed on the right bank of the TopÃÂiderka river, in southern section of the large park-woods Koà ¡utnjak and TopÃÂider, on the road connecting downtown Belgrade to, at that time, industrial suburb of Rakovica. It still remains mainly residential area, with two elementary schools (ÃÂura Jakà ¡iàand Ivo AndriÃÂ), a medical centre, soccer field of the FK Rakovica and an open green market, with a population of 11,320 in 2011 (combined population of the local communities of Kanarevo Brdo, 6,376 and Koà ¡utnjak, 4,944).
The name of the hill appeared after 1950. it was named after the Kanar family, which owned the land where the neighborhood developed later, after the state nationalized the land.
In 2011 a project of the revitalization of the Kaljavi potok was announced. The stream is already channeled and has a concrete bed, but it also receives waters from many local cesspits. It was envisioned as the green oasis between the trolleybus terminus in Banjica and the "Tehnogas" factory in Kanarevo Brdo, just from downtown Belgrade. The section of the stream was projected as the history and nature reserve as it was to include the remnants of the BanjicaÃÂs paleolithic site, pedestrian and bicycle paths, trim trail, a series of small bridges over the stream, three natural springs, limestone above-the-ground formations and the habitat of 20 species of rare birds, not usually find in the urbanized areas. The entire revitalized area was projected at and should comprise the surrounding forest, rearranged forest paths, outdoor gym, children playgrounds and gazebos. The illegally built houses, fences, gardens and sewage drains along the stream were to be demolished. It was supposed to be the starting phase of the creation of the "green-blue corridors", the network of arranged forest and water sections all over the city, and the next project was already slated to be the stream of Jelezovac potok, a tributary to the Kaljavi potok. As of 2017, nothing from the entire project has been done.