Ušće Towers
| Ušće Towers | |
|---|---|
Пословни центар УшћеPoslovni centar Ušće | |
Ušće Towers in August 2019 | |
Location within Belgrade | |
| General information | |
| Status | Complete (First tower) Complete (Second tower) |
| Location | New Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia, Bulevar Mihajlo Pupin 6 |
| Coordinates | 44°48′58″N 20°26′13″E / 44.81611°N 20.43694°E |
| Construction started | 1962 |
| Completed | 1964 |
| Renovated | 2005 |
| Owner | MPC Holding |
| Height | |
| Height | roof 110 m (360.9 ft) |
| Technical details | |
| Floor count | 25 |
| Floor area | 25,000 m2 (269,100 sq ft) |
| Lifts/elevators | 7 (+ 1 freight) |
| Design and construction | |
| Architect | Mihailo Janković |
| Main contractor | European Construction |
| Website | |
| www | |
The Ušće Towers (Serbian Cyrillic: Пословни центар Ушће, romanized: Poslovni centar Ušće) are two 25-story mixed-use skyscrapers located at Mihajlo Pupin Boulevard in the New Belgrade municipality of Belgrade, Serbia. The first tower, 98 meters tall, was the tallest building in Serbia and the Balkans for 15 years until the construction of the Genex Tower in 1979. It was also the second-tallest freestanding structure, after the Avala Tower, in Serbia during this time. Construction of the second tower, designed as a twin of the first, began in 2018 and was completed in June 2020.
Built in 1964, the first Ušće Tower overlooks the confluence (Serbo-Croatian: ušće) of the Danube and Sava rivers from the New Belgrade side. It was originally used as the headquarters of the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, which broke apart in 1990.
Ušće was frequently leased out to commercial interests until 21 April 1999, when it was severely damaged by successive NATO airstrikes as part of the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. Beginning in 2003, the tower was reconstructed, including a two-floor increase (103,9m / 340,9 ft in total) in height, with the addition of a 26m antenna, which in strict architectural terms does not count as structural height, however, in structural height would actually be 103,9 m. The reconstructed tower is now being rented out to tenants.