Give five stars. Because there are basically no tourists. It's really clean. Open the exploration map and navigate directly to the foot of the mountain. Turn around to overlook the whole city of Belgrade, but the effect is not the best. The best viewing effect is to see Deng Avarata. 300 dinars, 20 yuan to go up. There is no charge for the telescope. The effect is not bad. When you climb the tower, someone will send you up. When I go up, I will be myself. The same as the private room.
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Give five stars. Because there are basically no tourists. It's really clean. Open the exploration map and navigate directly to the foot of the mountain. Turn around to overlook the whole city of Belgrade, but the effect is not the best. The best viewing effect is to see Deng Avarata. 300 dinars, 20 yuan to go up. There is no charge for the telescope. The effect is not bad. When you climb the tower, someone will send you up. When I go up, I will be myself. The same as the private room.
Access: Public transportation is available only from May to August every year, and there are 400 buses to and from downtown Belgrade and Ava every Saturday and Sunday, from April to October Monday to Sunday, and from November to November.
Awara Mountain is located 15 kilometers south of the suburbs of Belgrade, 511 meters above sea level, the mountains are densely forested, beautiful scenery, you need to drive to, summer here is the first choice for locals to travel. On the top of the mountain, there is a monument to the unsung heroes, commemorating the national heroes who died in the First World War. Standing on the top of the mountain, you can overlook the surrounding pastoral scenery. Halfway up the mountain, there is a unique marble monument in mourning the death of more than a dozen Soviet generals who participated in the plane crash of Yugoslavia. There is also Serbia's tallest building, the Avara TV Tower, 205 meters tall, destroyed in the 1999 NATO bombing, and restored and reused, with a revolving restaurant that offers a full view of Belgrade.
It seems to be the tallest building in the Balkans, with TV stations overlooking the surrounding scenery, and there is a memorial tower that seems to be World War I, and there are traces of bombing. On the weekends on the mountain, many Serbians drove their families to barbecue. In spring, they went to various small flowers to bloom particularly beautifully, and there were peach blossoms and cherry blossoms. The environment was very good.
Located on the edge of the city, Mount Avara is another scenic spot in Belgrade, with a panoramic view of the mountaintop, Belgrade and surrounding areas. The famous Unknown Warrior Monument on the top of the mountain was built in 1938 and is the main venue for important commemorations in the south. Another Avara TV tower, destroyed in the NATO bombing in 1999, was rebuilt and can be boarded up to see the panoramic view.