This is a list of notable buildings in Belgrade, Serbia.
Aleksandar Palas Hotel
Avala TV Tower – highest of its kind in the world; reconstructed following its destruction in the NATO bombing of 1999, and opened in 2010.
Bajrakli Mosque – one of the oldest mosques in the Balkans, early 16th century
Beli Dvor – royal mansion with its neo-renaissance and neoclassic castles
Belgrade Arena – the biggest sports hall in Southeastern/Central Europe
Belgrade Fair - Hall 1 – the world's largest dome between 1957 and 1965
Belgrade Planetarium
Belgrade Law School
Belgrade University Library
Beograđanka – once the tallest business tower in the Balkans
BIGZ building
Captain Miša’s Mansion – home to the University of Belgrade
Count Miloš's Residence – early 19th century Balkan-style palace
Countess Ljubica's Residence – early 19th century Balkan-style palace
Despot Stefan Tower build in 1402.
Genex Tower – the third tallest residential building in the Balkans
Kuća Cveća – Josip Broz Tito mauseoleum
Mika Alas's House, 1910-built historic home of scientist Mihailo Petrović
Metropol Hotel Belgrade
National Museum
National Assembly of Serbia
National Theatre
Palace Albania – built in 1930, the first Balkan skyscraper
Saborna Crkva – neobaroque in Belgrade, mid 19th century
Sava Center – the biggest congress hall in the region.
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts – One of the most beautiful buildings in Belgrade, built in 1922
St. Mark's Church – Emperor Dusan's tomb.
Cathedral of Saint Sava – The world's largest Eastern Orthodox Christian (Serb Orthodox) cathedral.
The Old Palace – neoclassicism in Belgrade, early 20th century
Ušće Tower – Formerly housed the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. Following NATO bombing, from which only the skeleton of the building survived, it has been redeveloped into an office block.