There are three villages along the gorge.
Dolni Pasarel is located in a valley widening in the upper section.
Kokalyane and
Pancharevo are situated in the lower section and form a continuous urban zone. Along its entire length runs a 23.2 km stretch of the second class
II-82 road Kostenets–
Samokov–
Sofia. With its picturesque forested slopes and numerous landmarks, Pancharevo Gorge is a popular tourist destination and is easily accessible from the national capital Sofia. A few kilometers upstream is the
Pancharevo Hydro Power Plant, the first one in Bulgaria and the
Balkans, inaugurated in 1900. It was decommissioned in 1956 and declared a monument of culture in 1986. Further upstream along the large meander of the Iskar is a complex of several sites dating from the Middle Ages. Raising on the rights bank are the ruins of the fortress of
Urvich, which was part of the defenses of Sofia. It rose to prominence as an important stronghold of the
Second Bulgarian Empire during the
Bulgarian–Ottoman wars of the late 14th century. Less than a kilometer to the northeast is the
Pancharevo Monastery, while on the opposite bank of the river about a kilometer to the south is the
Kokalyane Monastery. Both were part of the cluster of 14 monasteries around medieval Sofia and were destroyed by the Ottomans after the fall of Bulgaria. They were restored in the 19th century. In the upper part of the gorge is located the
Dolni Pasarel Monastery, established in the 15th century and also restored in the 19th century. == Citations ==