Guidebook for Sarajevo

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Guidebook for Sarajevo

Food Scene

Great French bakery!
23 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Maison Coco
1 Kranjčevićeva
23 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Great French bakery!
Restaurant and bar with good food and drinks
36 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Brewery Sarajevo
7 Maršala Tita
36 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Restaurant and bar with good food and drinks
Good food and also very good service
Bistro Chat Noir
21 Hiseta
Good food and also very good service
Very nice restaurant and bar
10 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Four Seasons Penthouse Restaurant
2 Franca Lehara
10 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Very nice restaurant and bar
There is several places in SCC that you can eat including food court on 3rd floor.
248 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Sarajevo City Center
1 Vrbanja
248 (рекомендации местных жителей)
There is several places in SCC that you can eat including food court on 3rd floor.

Drinks & Nightlife

Great choice of beer
43 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Gastro Pub Vučko
10 Radićeva
43 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Great choice of beer
Nice choice of vine
12 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Dekanter
4 Radićeva
12 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Nice choice of vine

Sightseeing

Main pedestrian street in Sarajevo
39 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Ferhadija
Ferhadija
39 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Main pedestrian street in Sarajevo
Great experience of old Sarajevo
310 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Башчаршия
310 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Great experience of old Sarajevo
Visit Sarajevo Cathedral. The building is in the Neo-Gothic style, with Romanesque Revival elements. The building was awarded to the Viennese contractor Baron Karl Schwarz with supervising architect Josip Vancaš. He modeled it after the Notre-Dame in Dijon (France). Work began on 25 August 1884, and was completed on 9 November 1887.
154 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Собор Святого Сердца
2 Trg Fra Grge Martića
154 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Visit Sarajevo Cathedral. The building is in the Neo-Gothic style, with Romanesque Revival elements. The building was awarded to the Viennese contractor Baron Karl Schwarz with supervising architect Josip Vancaš. He modeled it after the Notre-Dame in Dijon (France). Work began on 25 August 1884, and was completed on 9 November 1887.
The Gazi Husrev-beg Mosque was built in 937 AH (1530/1531 AD) as the central object of the Beg's endowment, which also included a maktab and a madrasa (Islamic primary and secondary schools), a bezistan (vaulted marketplace), a hammam (public bathplace) etc.
164 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Мечеть Гази Хусрев-бега
8 Sarači
164 (рекомендации местных жителей)
The Gazi Husrev-beg Mosque was built in 937 AH (1530/1531 AD) as the central object of the Beg's endowment, which also included a maktab and a madrasa (Islamic primary and secondary schools), a bezistan (vaulted marketplace), a hammam (public bathplace) etc.
Great opportunity to see Sarajevo from the above and to hike or to have a nice walk on Trebevic mountain.
110 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Sarajevska žičara
bb Hrvatin
110 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Great opportunity to see Sarajevo from the above and to hike or to have a nice walk on Trebevic mountain.

Everything Else

The Eternal flame (Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian: Vječna vatra / Вјечна ватра) is a memorial to the military and civilian victims of the Second World War in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The memorial was dedicated on 6 April 1946, the first anniversary of the liberation of Sarajevo from the four-year-long occupation by Nazi Germany and the fascist Independent State of Croatia. The memorial was designed by architect Juraj Neidhardt and is located in the center of Sarajevo at the junction of Mula Mustafa Bašeskije, Titova and Ferhadija streets.[1]
43 (рекомендации местных жителей)
Vječna vatra
Ferhadija
43 (рекомендации местных жителей)
The Eternal flame (Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian: Vječna vatra / Вјечна ватра) is a memorial to the military and civilian victims of the Second World War in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The memorial was dedicated on 6 April 1946, the first anniversary of the liberation of Sarajevo from the four-year-long occupation by Nazi Germany and the fascist Independent State of Croatia. The memorial was designed by architect Juraj Neidhardt and is located in the center of Sarajevo at the junction of Mula Mustafa Bašeskije, Titova and Ferhadija streets.[1]

Arts & Culture

The National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian: Zemaljski Muzej Bosne i Hercegovine / Земаљски музеј Босне и Херцеговине) is located in central Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was established in 1888, having originally been conceived around 1850. In 1913, the museum building was expanded by the Czech architect Karel Pařík who designed a structure of four symmetric pavilions with a facade in the Italian Renaissance Revival style. The four pavilions contain the departments of archaeology, ethnology, natural history, and a library. After being closed for several years due to heavy damage in the recent war, the museum has re-opened and is in the
171 (рекомендации местных жителей)
The National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina
3 Zmaja od Bosne
171 (рекомендации местных жителей)
The National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian: Zemaljski Muzej Bosne i Hercegovine / Земаљски музеј Босне и Херцеговине) is located in central Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was established in 1888, having originally been conceived around 1850. In 1913, the museum building was expanded by the Czech architect Karel Pařík who designed a structure of four symmetric pavilions with a facade in the Italian Renaissance Revival style. The four pavilions contain the departments of archaeology, ethnology, natural history, and a library. After being closed for several years due to heavy damage in the recent war, the museum has re-opened and is in the