Location
The factory complex is located at 3 and 3-a ''Radnička'' street, in the municipality of Čukarica. On the west, south and east it is encircled by the ''Paštrovićeva'' street, which on the east separates it from the Belgrade Hippodrome and the neighborhood of Careva Ćuprija. To the north, across the ''Radnička'', is the Sava river's Bay of Čukarica and Belgrade's popular recreational zone, Ada Ciganlija. To the northwest it borders another industrial complex, the reservoirs of Jugopetrol.History
At the present location of the sugar factory, there was a kafana in the second half of the 19th century. It was very popular as it was located at the point where two roads, one from Obrenovac and other from Šumadija, meet at the entrance to Belgrade. It was owned by Stojko Čukar and after him the kafana was named “Čukareva kafana” which later gave name to the village of Čukarica, which developed into the urban neighborhood and a municipality of Belgrade. King Alexander Obrenović instigated the Law on promotion of the domestic industry in 1898. Based on the law, the international tendering for the sugar factory was announced and companies from Belgium, United Kingdom, Austria-Hungary, Germany and even Japan applied. The grant was given to the German consortium "Royal Serbian privileged sugar factory in Belgrade, Hacke, Goldschmidt and Weinschenk". The consortium was formed by Alfred Hacke, an engineer from Magdeburg, Julius Goldschmidt, a banker and a consul from Lugshaven and Max Weinschenk, industrialist and the main shareholder of the large sugar refinery inClosing
In 1982 the production was transferred to the new sugar factory in Padinska Skela, surrounded by under sugar beet. The factory in Čukarica fully stopped refining sugar in 1983. The new complex worked until 1998, processing 6,000 tons ofFuture
In 2017 city announced the bidding for an architectural competition concerning the wider Careva Ćuprija area (hippodrome, Sugar Refinery and the "Jugopetrol" complex), 55 hectares (140 acres) in total. In September 2017 the winning project was announced, a work of Marija Krsmanović Stringeta, Anđelka Badnjar and Milena Kordić. The present "Jugopetrol" depots will be demolished and the hotel and the sports center will be built instead. The total area of the complex will be and it will not be higher than , or 4 floors. Two separate buildings (hotel and the sports center) will be shaped like the curved waves. From the complex, a new system of pathways will allow the entrance into the hippodrome from the side which is not accessible to the visitors today, while in front the buildings the square will be constructed. From the square, paths through the wooded area will connect it to the old factory. Industrial halls will be renovated. As for the protected objects, they will remain as they are, since they are not owned by the city. Within the factory complex, on the area of , some of the objects will be adapted into the artistic colonies, research centers, bookstores, souvenir shops, etc., though all of them will have to preserve the authentic look of the objects. The monuments to Dimitrije Tucović and the strikers who were killed in World War II will be restored. A footbridge over the ''Radnička'' Street will be built, to directly connect the refinery complex to Ada Ciganlija. In October 2018 city officially announced its intention of purchasing the sugar refinery complex, thus becoming its legal proprietor. In February 2022 city declared the Old Refinery and surrounding a cultural center which can't be used for any other purposes. City and state plan to jointly buy out the complex from the bankruptcy estate. City managed to acquire the former "Jugopetrol" section, adjacent to the refinery complex, and part of the same project, through the exchange with the Naftna Industrija Srbije. The city announced selling of this land in November 2021, where the potential buyer and future investor has no obligation to follow the already accepted project. City also announced that construction of shopping molls, supermarkets, gas stations, wholesale markets, warehouses or commercial garages is forbidden. Cultural and sports complexes are allowed. Some of the existing structures, like the watch tower, a residential house, and chimney of the former heating plant, have to remain intact, or eventually to be renovated. On 17 December 2021, city sold the lot to the controversial "Belgrade Waterfront" investor. Political opposition and activists criticized the purchase, citing dubious and haste process, and the fact that "Belgrade Waterfront" purchased the lot for €27 million, while at the same time it owes €100 million to the city. On 24 May 2019, a five-storeys Ada Mol shopping mall was opened right across the complex. Unrelated to any of the previous plans, the mall's project envisioned a footbridge which would directly connect the mall with the pedestrian section of the Radnička Street in front of the former factory. When construction began in May 2020, it was announced that the project includes extended footbridge from factory directly to the Ada Ciganlija's main entrance. Original deadline was set for September 2020. Though the project was described as "not really complicated", the deadline was first moved to 1 December 2020, and then to 15 March 2021, before being moved to 30 Apr 2021. The construction works were effectively completed in May 2021, but the footbridge remained closed, and the opening was moved to March 2022, but then prolonged to August 2022.Architecture
The buildings are typical examples of the late 19th century industrial architecture in northern and central Europe. Concerning architectural merits, only the central building, the machine room, stands out. It was made of brick and has a characteristic Lombard band (''bogen-friz'') under the roof. The reconstructions done during the Interbellum and after the World War II, apart from adding new machines also expanded some of the buildings. These extensions changed some of the original architectural features of the complex.Protection
In the 1980s it was included into the Topčider Spatial Cultural-Historical Unit of Exceptional Importance, as an important work of industrial architecture. The complex itself was declared a cultural monument in 1984 (''Službeni list grada Beograda'', No. 23/84). The protected area covers and includes 7 objects.References
{{coord, 44.786540, N, 20.421548, E, region:RS_type, display=title Buildings and structures in Belgrade Buildings and structures completed in 1901 Protected Monuments of Culture Sugar refineries Industrial buildings in Serbia Čukarica