Buildings '''King Peter's House''' A vacant summer house of
King Peter I Karađorđević. The house stands across the football pitch of "
Grafičar" and close to the building of the military academy. The house, called the "White villa", was built in 1896 and it belonged to the merchant Živko Pavlović. In 1919 the state, represented by the Ministry of education, leased the house for the king who lived there from 1919 to his death in 1921. Monthly rent was 3,000 dinars in silver. The king lived quite modestly. His own room was equipped with bed, small cabinet with the sink, locker, lamp, sable and chandelier. The king had his own library, with the books printed by the
Srpska književna zadruga. He spent much time on the vast terrace and in the garden. After king's death in August 1921, the Royal Intendancy bought the house out in order to make it a museum. In the 1930s it was declared a king's memorial-house. After 1945 residents changed and mostly included the high-ranking members of the new Communist elite and in that period majority of the exhibited artifacts, the legacy of the king, were either destroyed od taken away. Missing items include the king's
death mask and the only remaining artifact was the king's bed. In 1945 the house was adapted into the elementary school which was closed in 1951 and the house, for the most part since then, remained abandoned and left to the elements. In 2010 the house was adapted into the cultural center. Within the house, a memorial room for the king was set, which includes a mosaic of 100 photographs of the king and his family.
Faculty of Fine Arts complex Bordered by the streets of Mila Milunovića, Župana Časlava and Vojvoda Putnik's Boulevard, the complex is part of the
University of Arts in Belgrade's Faculty of Fine Arts. It includes three buildings, one of which is the former
atelier, built in 1947, of painter
Milo Milunović who died in 1967. The atelier hosts the painting section of the faculty. Other building hosts the graphics section, while the third is administrative building. Modernist, one-floor new building which would connect the existing, separate structures, which, in turn, will be expanded, was announced in September 2022. The green areas will be transformed into the park, which would also serve as an open air gallery.
Other buildings • Military Academy; after
World War I, military academy was constructed by orders of King
Peter I. The academy's building is majestic, with heavy cream-colored walls and tall windows. During World War II the occupational
German forces made it the headquarters for their military operations in the
Balkans. The
Allies bombed the neighborhood during the war in order to destroy the headquarters and the bridge over the Sava, but they didn't manage to hit it or cause any damage to the building or the bridge. •
Museum of African Art; it was established from the private collection of a Yugoslav diplomat, and contains many rare pieces. • Museum of
Toma Rosandić; located in the house, where the sculptor lived and worked until his death, was built by himself in 1929, and now holds a unique collection that is, unfortunately, not open to public, except on certain days (such as The Museum Night). •
Ecole Française de Belgrade, an international
French school founded in 1951. The school is composed of a
nursery school, an
elementary school, a
middle school and a
high school. • Senjak Gymnastics Club, which was a starting point for the future career of the renowned
Yugoslav rhythmic gymnast Milena Reljin. • The
Archives of Yugoslavia and stadium and restaurant "
FK Grafičar", both in the vicinity of
Topčiderska zvezda, small
roundabout with streets spreading in all directions connecting Senjak, Dedinje, downtown Belgrade, Topčider and further to the south (
Kanarevo Brdo,
Rakovica, etc.). •
BIGZ building •
Faculty of Economics, Finance and Administration (member of
Singidunum University) •
International School of Belgrade •
Old Mill, a cultural monument since 1987, in 2014 adapted into the
Radisson Blu Old Mill Hotel. • Senjak Greenmarket (
Senjačka pijaca) was located along the Sava river and was originally built for the workers of the Cardboard factory of Milan Vapa, which was right across it. The factory complex included the apartments for workers. Market is still operational, albeit smaller, along the
Koste Glavinića Street.
Nature • Two
state protected trees of the
Himalayan white pine, native to
Afghanistan and
Himalaya. They were planted in 1929, in the yard of the family of the scientist
Milutin Milanković, in the
Žanke Stokić street. • Protected
natural monument "Dedinje Beech", a
European beech tree, noted for its unusually big size in urban habitats: 22 meters tall, 2,8 meter trunk diameter, 19 meters crown diameter. As of 2017 it is estimated at being 90 years old. The school itself was named "Branko Parać Relja" from 1959 to 1993, when its original name was restored. • Two sections of Senjak are classified as forests: Grafičar Forest () and Rajsova Padina. == Sub-neighborhoods==