Unorthodox Socialism

Private tour of socialist and brutalist architecture in Belgrade

2.5 hours – EUR 65

Have close ups of five key buildings of Socialist Yugoslavian capital New Belgrade

Put architecture in context: modernism, brutalism, city planning, Cold War, rise and fall of Yugoslavia

Get why this architecture stood out at MoMa New York and Venice Biennale

Quick book this tour

 

Use the form on the right to book this tour. We will be in touch shortly after your booking with the confirmation.

See five iconic socialist and brutalist buildings in Belgrade

 

This dynamic tour across New Belgrade, once the capital of socialist Yugoslavia, takes a close look of five exemplary buildings of socialist and brutalist architecture. You’ll see a museum, government, business tower, housing block and convention hall. In 2 hours, you’ll understand 50 years of a society that some saw as utopia and some as dictatorship.

Why take architecture tour of New Belgrade

 

In recent years, architecture and city planning in socialist Yugoslavia in the years 1948 – 1980, created a hype at MoMa New York and Venice Biennale of Architecture. On this tour, you’ll hear how it was to live it, as your art historian guide spent her school years living in the socialist housing block in New Belgrade.

What to expect from socialist and brutalist architecture of New Belgrade

 

Brace yourself for discoveries. After the tour, you’ll not think the same way about Yugoslavia, socialism or social housing. What you assumed was just another Soviet style mass of blocks will surprise you.

On your private architecture tour, you’ll see the buildings for the socialist elites, buildings for socialist business, buildings to impress the heads of Non Aligned states and social housing blocks for the declaratively classless society. Since its birth in 1948 until 1980, New Belgrade grew from 0 to 200,000. The tour will show you how architecture and urban planning played a role in this socialist success story.

Communists, Modernists, and Non Aligned

 

You’ll meet the guide in front of the Museum of Contemporary Art at Ušće. You’ll explore its modernist 1960-ies volumes and find out why its precious marble facades contradict the stereotypes of socialist architecture.

On our way to the Government building, we walk through the Park of Friendship where the heads of 120 Non Aligned countries planted trees as symbols of peace, when the Movement was inaugurated in Belgrade in 1961.

Soviets, Americans and Brutalists

 

We’ll take a look of the Yugoslav Government Building from outside. The building is a monument of an earlier phase of YU politics, around 1948, when Yugoslavia strayed from the alignment with USSR. So the architecture turned away from Soviet models right in the middle of construction!

Our next stop is the Genex Tower, aka Western City Gate, a 30 floor structure that won instagrams of many visitors of Belgrade. Built in 1977 by a Yugoslav state owned global business, it was the first smart building in the Balkans, acclaimed as a brutalist masterpiece.

Idealistic brutalist housing block in New Belgrade

From controversies and merits of Yugoslav business, we move to controversies and merits of Yugoslav housing and living. Inside the Block no. 23 you’ll discover the concept that was not a ghetto, but included public schools and kindergartens, sport courts and art studios, greenery and a mini shopping mall. You’ll hear the guide’s personal stories of life in the blocks in their golden decades of 60s, 70s and 80s. And the stories of living not so well in 90s.

Records, awards and End of Party

Our final stop is a gigantic congress center, built in 1977, beating all the records with its speed of construction. The first convention hall in this part of Europe, nominated for Pritzker Architecture Prize, Sava Center was the final stop for Yugoslavia as well, as the Communist Party cracked in this building, on its last congress in 1990.

Practical Info

Meeting point

In front of the main entrance to Museum of Contemporary Art

End point

Physical activity

easy walking and car

Payment

Cash at the start of the tour

Start times

9am – 3pm

Let’s Go!

Ready to hit the right places at right times?