The building has 4 floors, there are about 150 shops on them, there is a department store, cafes and restaurants, fast food outlets, a supermarket MMM Migros. Here you can get acquainted with local products that are widely represented here. There are also international brands: Park Bravo, Zara, Lacoste, Marks & Spencer, Beymen and others.
A modern shopping centre with many shops and cafes, surrounded by landscaped parks and fountains.
A fish restaurant with a view of the Bosphorus, located in a 20th-century factory building. The local menu is rich in delicacies, from fish pastirma to grilled squid and fish manti, and surprises with a selection of excellent Turkish wines to go with any dish.
Situated in the seaside district of Bebek along the Bosphorus, Lucca Bar serves as a café during the day and a lively bar in the evenings. The bar has a modern bar and bistro concept. The food and cocktails are excellent and it is the perfect place to spend your money.
Geyiklerin eşliğinde kahvaltı yapabileceğiniz bir park A park where you can have breakfast in the company of deer
Széchenyi Square is the main square in the historical centre of Pécs. In the Middle Ages, the square served as the city's market square, with a town hall and a parish church. Before it was named after Széchenyi in 1864, the square had several other names, including Frum, Városi Piaç, and Feter.
Pécs Cathedral is a Roman Catholic cathedral in the city of Pécs. The foundations of the cathedral date back to the Roman period, around the 4th century. In 1882–1891, in honor of the millennium of the conquest of the homeland on the Danube, the cathedral was decorated with a classical main façade with pointed arches. In the mid-20th century, sculptures of the twelve apostles by Antal Károly were installed on the southern pediment of the cathedral.
Rumelihisarı, also known as Rumeli Fortress, is a historic 15th-century fortress located on the European side of the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkey. Built by Sultan Mehmed II in just over four months in 1452, it played a crucial role in the Ottoman siege of Constantinople, controlling naval traffic on the Bosphorus and preventing outside aid from reaching the city. The fortress features three imposing towers connected by thick walls and offers stunning views of the Bosphorus Strait.
There are about 300 stores in this shopping center. Such famous brands as Sephora, Sevil, Dolce & Gabbana, Celine, Fendi, Louis Vuitton, Vakko, Debenhams, Hugo Boss, Mango, M.A.C., Dior, Prada, Max Mara, Zara, Boyner are widely represented here. The cafe "Rainforest Café", known all over the world, first appeared in Turkey in this shopping center. The IMAX (3D) cinema also appeared here for the first time in Istanbul.
Istinye Park is one of the most modern and prestigious shopping and lifestyle centers in Istanbul, Turkey. Located in the İstinye district on the European shore of the Bosphorus, it offers a mix of luxury shopping, dining, entertainment, and leisure activities. The mall features high-end international and local brands, a cinema complex, children's play areas, and a variety of cafes and restaurants.
A restaurant with its own boat. If you are coming from the European side, contact the staff: the boat will pick you up at the Rumeli Fortress and take you straight to the restaurant. Then it's a small matter - enjoy fish delicacies while watching the sunset.
An elegant Mediterranean restaurant in a picturesque corner of the Bosphorus. The garden, surrounded by greenery, offers incredible views of the water. The menu offers fish dishes for every taste: from fish soup to sea bass with green curry and seafood pasta.
A symbol of Bulgaria’s past greatness, Tsarevets Fortress is built on the spot where the palace of the medieval tsars once stood 800 years before when Tarnovo was its capital. Explore the ancient rambling ruins and stumble across the remains of over 400 houses and innumerable churches.
The cave is located at an altitude of 1641 m in the Alps. The cave consists of many mysterious passages that the river naturally created here. The limestone rocks were washed away by water over several millennia. The ice build-up on the walls and vaults was formed by the natural melting of the Alpine snow.
The Hôtel des Invalides in Paris isn’t a hotel at all, but a complex built by Louis XIV as a home for veterans. You can easily recognize its characteristic golden, under which Napoleon Bonaparte is buried. His is quite the tomb: red quartzite on a base of green granite, surrounded by a mosaic containing the names of Napoleon’s war victories.
The tower's builder, Gustave Eiffel, was born with a different last name: Bönickshausen. His father had been a military officer of German origin but in 1877, in the wake of France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War, Gustave officially changed his name to avoid being tainted as a Prussian spy. Of course by the time the tower was built, Bönickshausen had been replaced by Eiffel.
Not long after the Centre Pompidou, one of the most famous landmarks in Europe, the Louvre Museum, was to be modernized, again striking fear into Parisian hearts. When the new design (by I.M. Pei) was first shown to the French, emotions evolved quickly: disbelief at first, followed by disgust.
The Centre Pompidou was inaugurated in 1977, but not before it set many tongues wagging, confirming that Parisians don't seem to take instantly to what is modern. The peculiarity of this building is that it is turned inside out: all the pipes, conduits and shafts are placed outside the building rather than inside, as is usual.
For almost a century, the Vršac fortress remained under Serbian control, but in the middle of the 15th century, the Ottomans managed to capture it, and a little over 150 years later, the city became part of the Austrian Empire. After the end of World War I, Austria-Hungary disintegrated and Vršac again came under Serbian control as part of Yugoslavia. Restoration work began in the 1980s and continues to this day, as the authorities intend to completely recreate the fortress.
One of the iconic historical monuments in Paris, the Arc de Triomphe commemorates Napoleon's victory at Austerlitz. The Arc de Triomphe is at the center of Place Charles De Gaulle (more commonly known as the Place de l'Étoile) in the 8th arrondissement, which marks the west end of the Champs Elysées and connects all 12 major avenues in Paris.



















