Piramida shopping mall. All photos by Lazara Marinković
This article originally appeared on VICE Serbia.
During the 1980s and 1990s, dozens of shopping malls were erected in the Serbian capital of Belgrade, representing a new, modern shopping experience in the formerly Communist city. They were built almost overnight, and seem to have been abandoned with the same swiftness. They smell of mildew and decay now—the shop windows plastered with newspaper sheets. People who used to come here now shop online, or have moved on to bigger, shinier, newer shopping malls where only international chains and rich local tycoons can afford to rent a space.
I went to visit some of them, to see the state they're in now. One of these malls is Staklenac (Glass house in Serbian)—a hideous glass makeshift construction built for temporary use, 27 years ago. It was, unsuccessfully so, built in the image of London's Crystal Palace. Only a couple of shops inside it are open now—some fast food places and newsstands, an internet cafe and a yoga place. There are days when nobody comes in.
Cumic, a tiny mall in the heart of Belgrade, is an exception. Most shops are as abandoned as in any other mall of its kind, but a collective of 20 Serbian designers is renting a wing of the building to sell its work. Still, one of the designers told me that although they now have a shop in the heart of Belgrade, they mostly sell online.
Piramida shopping mall
Staklenac shopping mall
Staklenac shopping mall
Sparrows at Staklenac shopping mall
Cumic shopping mall
Cumic shopping mall
Zeleni Venac shopping mall
Zeleni Venac shopping mall
Stankom shopping mall
Window shopping for cats
Shopping mall in Banovo Brdo, a suburb of Belgrade
Piramida shopping mall
Piramida shopping mall
Stankom shopping mall
Piramida shopping mall
Staklenac shopping mall
Staklenac shopping mall
Cumic shopping mall
Cumic shopping mall
Piramida shopping mall
Zeleni Venac shopping mall
Shopping mall in Banovo Brdo, a suburb of Belgrade
Stankom shopping mall
Stankom shopping mall