Gornji Grad–Medveščak

Gornji Grad–Medveščak (Croatian pronunciation: [gôːrɲiː grâːd medʋěʃt͡ʃaːk], "Upper Town–Medveščak") is one of the districts of Zagreb, Croatia; "Gornji Grad" translates as "upper town", referring to its historical location on city's hillside, being above Donji grad ("lower town"). The district is located in the central part of the city and, according to the 2011 census, it has 30,962 inhabitants[1] spread over 10.12 km2 (3.91 sq mi).

Gornji Grad–Medveščak
Location of Gornji Grad-Medveščak, shown in red, in Zagreb
Country Croatia
County Zagreb
Modern district founded14 December 1999
Government
  President of the CouncilLuka Bogdan, HDZ
  District Council
Area
  Total10.1 km2 (3.91 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)
  Total30,962

Gornji Grad – Medveščak is a district with a high number of historic sites and tourist attractions. Gradec and Kaptol, the two distinct cores of medieval Zagreb, are forming today's Upper Town, and both are parts of this district. The city's Cathedral, the St. Mark's Church and the Croatian Parliament are located in Gornji Grad, as is the popular pedestrian café street Tkalčićeva. There are also other noteworthy objects located outside the oldest historical towns, such as city's monumental cemetery Mirogoj that was built since 1876, located further north.

It is bordered by four other districts: Donji Grad to the south, Črnomerec to the west, Maksimir to the east and Podsljeme to the north.

Streets and transport

The most important arterial road in Gornji Grad–Medveščak flows between its southern and northern border, starting as a narrow Ribnjak street alongside the Ribnjak park, then widening and changing name to Medveščak street until Gupčeva zvijezda, and again changing name in the north to Ksaver. The road is the main tram connection for Medveščak (lines 8 and 14). The district is also connected in its southern borders by many other important tram lines that run along Ilica, Jurišićeva and Vlaška streets. The short historic Zagreb funicular connects Lower and Upper town, and several less frequent (every 20–45 minutes) bus routes run through the hilly and less populated northern areas.

Government

Belonging to the districts with a population between 30,000 and 50,000, Gornji Grad – Medveščak is ruled by a council consisting of 15 councilmen appointed at the 2005 elections.[2][3] A majority of six seats is held by the coalition of Social Democratic Party (SDP), Croatian Peasant Party (HSS) and Croatian Party of Pensioners (HSU). The other dominant coalition, Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), Democratic Centre (DC) and Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS), won three seats. The SDP–HSS–HSU coalition has appointed the council president, SDP member Anđelko Šućur. The vice president is Miljenko Radetić, also a member of SDP.[3]

List of neighborhoods in Gornji Grad–Medveščak

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gollark: I wasn't aware of this. I vaguely remember reading that they were basically the same languagewise apart from minor details of some kind.
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See also

References

  1. "Population by Age and Sex, by Districts of City of Zagreb, 2011 Census". Census of Population, Households and Dwellings 2011. Zagreb: Croatian Bureau of Statistics. December 2012.
  2. "Tijela gradskih četvrti i načini njihova izbora". City of Zagreb (in Croatian). Retrieved 2008-11-22.
  3. "Vijeće gradske četvrti". City of Zagreb (in Croatian). Retrieved 2008-11-22.

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