The destroyed urban areas extended over several informal districts (
cartiere), some of exceptional architectural and/or historical significance. Since both the urban project and its execution were much of a trial-and-error process, demolitions were often arbitrary. However, a certain west to east pattern of demolition can be ascertained: the western area of
Uranus as well as approximately 92% of the adjoining eastern area of
Văcărești were destroyed, while the areas situated farther east like
Dudești and
Theodor Speranția were demolished only along the large boulevards which had to be created there.
Uranus area The Uranus district was the foremost target of the flattening, since it had an exceptional geographic value, being situated on the most prominent hill in Bucharest; this was where the House of the People was to be placed. The hill on which the Uranus city district was located, called
Dealul Spirii, was radically reshaped in order to make it bear the House of the People. Another hill belonging to the Uranus area, of lesser dimensions, was the
Mihai Vodă Hill. The destruction of the Uranus area reached the shore of the
Dâmbovița River (
Splaiul Independenței) on the north side, the streets
Hașdeu and
Isvor on the east side,
Sabinelor and
Calea Rahovei streets on the south side, cutting a straight line of some 1,200 meters on the north-south axis through a dense urban area along the streets
Bateriilor and
Logofătul Nestor. Other important streets of the Uranus district were: Uranus, Mihai Vodă, Puțul cu Apă Rece, Cazărmii, Militari, Schitul Maicilor, Banul Mihalcea, Meteorilor, Minotaurului, Arionoaia. The entire demolished area covered approximately 154 hectares. The Uranus neighbourhood is remembered for its special atmosphere; the area was both residential and monumental: many elegant houses and villas, as well as some low-density apartments blocks constructed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, coexisted with salient historical and architectural monuments. Thus, the fortified
Mihai Vodă Monastery, founded by the
Wallachian prince
Michael the Brave in 1589-1591, and housing the State Archives since 1866, was pulled down. Moreover, the entire
Mihai Vodă Hill has been leveled to open the view on the House of the People, while the
Mihai Vodă Church was moved to a new location nestled between concrete blocks of flats. , which still exists, not the demolished Old Saint Spiridon church. Among other edifices of cultural and/or historical significance torn down in the Uranus area were: the
Central Military Museum, the
old Arsenal, the
Art deco Stadium of the Republic (1926), the
Army Theatre,
Casa Demetriade, the
Operetta Theatre, the
Higher Education Institute for Physical Education, the ''Athletes' Hospital
, the Lahovary Fountain
and the "Isvor" open air bath. Among the churches torn down in the Uranus district were included: the Albă Postăvari Church
(donated in 1568 by a Doamna Caplea), the Spirea Veche Church
(founded by a doctor Spiridon Christofi in 1765), the Isvorul Tămăduirii Church'' (a
guilds' foundation of 1794), and the
Old Saint Spiridon Church (1668). The demolition of the churches was done with the approval of the Romanian Orthodox Church leaders. For instance, in 1989, Bishop
Nifon answered the questions of western reporters by claiming the churches demolished had not much historical interest and they were too close to others. Relocating churches and cutting them off from their architectural and cultural context to be reinserted into a narrowing neighbourhood is another expression of the strategy that created "Ceaușima". Some examples of churches that were relocated: the
Saint Ilie Rahova Church (1745), the
Schitul Maicilor Church (1726), the
Domnița Bălașa Church (founded in 1751 by Bălașa Lambrino, daughter of
Constantin Brâncoveanu), the
Sfântul Ioan Nou Church (18th century) and the entire outstanding monastic complex of
Antim Monastery (1713–1715). A similar type of urban intervention cut entire quarters out of their surroundings. Thus, the city area located south of the Dâmbovița between
Podul Isvor and
Piața Unirii and up to
Antim Monastery was hedged in by a large triangle of standardized concrete blocks of flats.
Piața Unirii The creation of the huge Boulevard of Socialism's Victory imposed additional demolitions in areas adjacent to the Uranus district. Piața Unirii was doubled in size. Excepting the
Art Nouveau metal structure of the Halele Unirii allegedly built by
Gustave Eiffel, the most notable demolition in this area was the
Brâncovenesc Hospital (
Așezămintele Brâncovenești – Brâncoveanu's Foundations, founded in 1835 by Safta Brâncoveanu) – an architectural monument and one of the most venerable, most ample and best-equipped medical institutions of Bucharest and Romania.
Văcărești area Located eastwards of
Piața Unirii, the
Văcărești area definitely belonged to the old Bucharest. The demolished area was located between
Calea Călărașilor on the north, the shore of the Dâmbovița on the west and south sides, and
Mircea Vodă and
Calea Văcăreștilor streets in the east. The architecture of the area was eclectic, bearing witness to successive cultural and historical strata, which resulted in a mixture of 18th- to 19th-century edifices (inns, stores) and more recent buildings from the early 20th century. Other significant streets of this area were: Căuzași, Olteni,
Iuliu Barasch, Banul Mărăcine, Sf. Ioan Nou, Mămulari, Sfânta Vineri, Negru Vodă, Haiducul Bujor, Clucerul Udricani, Pitagora. The total area razed covered approximately 66 hectares. Among the most notable destroyed edifices were: the
Sfânta Vineri-Herasca Church (founded in 1645),
Olteni Church (1696), the historical
Vechea Agie (Old Police Prefecture), the
Paediatrics Hospital, the
Mina Minovici Forensic Institute, the
Al. I. Cuza College, the monumental
Courthouse of the 4th District, the historical
Town Hall of the former
Blue Sector, several old inns and stores (underneath a UU-shaped commercial complex dating from the mid-19th century) and other characteristic edifices. The total area razed covered approximately 110 hectares.
Theodor Speranția area The
Theodor Speranția area was a residential area from the
interwar period, mixing middle with lower class dwelling structures. As in the case of Dudești, this neighbourhood was only partially erased. The total demolished surface was of approximately 50 hectares. However the urban planners of the era were so desperate to reach their goals that they proceeded to demolish a segment of a school building, an entire tower block (with both of its staircases) and partially another three tower blocks (only one of the two staircases). ==Summarizing "Ceaușima"==