Savski Venac (, ) is a municipality of the city of Belgrade. According to the 2022 census results, the municipality has a population of 36,699 inhabitants.
It is one of the three municipalities which constitute the very center of Belgrade, together with Stari Grad and VraÃÂar.
Savski Venac is located on the right bank of the Sava river. It stretches in the north-south direction for (from downtown Belgrade, just from Terazije, to Banjica) and east-west direction for (from Senjak and the Sava bank to Autokomanda). It borders the municipalities of Stari Grad to the north, VraÃÂar to the north-east, Voà ¾dovac to the east, Rakovica to the south and ÃÂukarica to the west.
While Savski Venac and Stari Grad are often styled the oldest municipalities of Belgrade due to their inclusion of the oldest sections of urban Belgrade outside the walls of the Kalemegdan fortress, they are actually the most recently created municipalities of Belgrade. Both were formed in 1957 by merger of older, smaller municipalities; Savski Venac was formed in by merger of the municipalities of Zapadni VraÃÂar (its main predecessor) and TopÃÂidersko Brdo and a new, geographical name, Savski Venac, was coined for it.
(Venac is usually used in Belgrade's geography in term of a round street (ObiliÃÂev Venac, KosanÃÂiÃÂev Venac) or a rim of the river (Dunavski Venac). In this case it was the "rim of the Sava".)
With an area of , Savski Venac is the third smallest municipality of Belgrade after VraÃÂar and Stari Grad. Despite being small in area, it includes several diverse geographical features:
According to the census of 2022, Savski Venac has a population of 36,699 inhabitants. As all the other central city municipalities, it has been depopulating for decades, however, it still remains one of the most densely populated: (4,686/kmò or 12,136/sq mi back in 1961).
The ethnic composition of the municipality:
Presidents of the municipality (since 1997):
The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity (as of 2018):
Sportsko Selo ("Sport Village") â In the early 1970s a football pitch was built at the end of the Deligradska street, right above the highway. It was adapted into the Yugoslav People's Army Reserve Officers' Training Ground, but in the early 1990s the location was abandoned. The lot was left unattended and gradually turned into a rubbish dump. In 2009 a project for the ground was jointly drafted by the city and the municipality with the working title "Ada Ciganlija u malom". After two years of construction, the new complex was opened on 30 May 2011. It covers an area of and contains one volleyball, three basketball and four tennis courts, children playgrounds and a fitness plateau. There are also a futsal and bocce courts, outdoor gym, walking paths, rest areas, wooden ice-cream kiosk and a parking lot. The complex is situated in a wooded area and includes an amphitheater suitable for the theatrical performances in the open. Invited to choose the name for the complex between the originally proposed "Ada Ciganlija u malom" and "Sportsko Selo" which appeared during the construction, citizens picked the latter.
Local football club FK BASK plays in the third-tier Serbian League Belgrade and play their home games at the Careva ÃÂuprija Stadium.
Savski Venac constitutes the western section of the downtown Belgrade. Most government offices and administrative buildings are located in the municipality, including:
Urban forests and parks include: