Overview
4-hour half-day — drive-along on a vintage Yugo + Red Belgrade + 1999 Chinese Embassy bombing site (a Chinese-audience exclusive)
Highlights
Vintage Yugo Zastava: 1980-90s Yugoslavia's national car — a living artefact of socialist industrialisation. Ride and photo with optional short driving experience (extra cost).
New Belgrade Brutalist architecture: Concrete masterworks of pre-1990 Yugoslav state engineering — strong appeal for architecture students, design lovers, history buffs.
Tito's Mausoleum & House of Flowers: Final resting place of Yugoslavia's lifelong president, preserving 1980s political-symbolic aesthetics — the strongest emotional anchor for older Chinese visitors who grew up with the Yugoslav cultural import.
1999 Chinese Embassy bombing site: Site of the 1999 NATO bombing — a Chinese-audience-exclusive emotional anchor, rarely featured in Serbian-language or English-language tour menus.
Pricing Tiers
We use a transparent 4-tier price ladder for all our day-tour and half-day products (per-person price drops with group size):
- 1 traveller (solo): €180
- 2 people: €95 /人 /person
- 4 people: €75 /人 /person
- 8+ people: €60 /人 /person
Includes vehicle + driver-guide + listed entrance fees and meals. Children (≤12) at 80% rate. 30% deposit at booking; balance settled on arrival.
Schedule
13:00 Belgrade hotel pickup in a vintage Yugo (photos en route)
13:30 New Belgrade Brutalist route (Genex Tower, SIV, Sava Centar)
14:30 Tito's Mausoleum + House of Flowers (250k gift exhibits)
15:30 1999 Chinese Embassy bombing site (~20 min commentary + photos)
16:30 Sava north bank skyline view
17:00 Hotel drop-off
Service Standards
- Vintage Yugo (with one driver; self-driving optional extra)
- Mandarin-speaking driver-guide commentary (Yugoslav history / 1999 background)
- Tito's Mausoleum + House of Flowers entry
- Short-term car insurance + group photo
Book Now
Once you've decided your group size and dates, contact us to confirm availability and final price. We recommend booking at least 3-7 days ahead (5-9 months in peak season; longer in major holidays).