N. I’m really proud of my town, kind people,brave ones, humorous , always ready to show you their hospitality. This time, you could see only a part of if. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
The dirtiest city in Serbia and possibly the dirtiest city on the entire European continent. The fortress and King Milan square are beautiful but the rest of the town is in dire need of a complete overhaul and a deep clean (I suggest to transport the entire population to a clean city like Novi Sad, Sabac or Subotica for a month long course on cleanliness and civil values. Whilst the course is ongoing the center of town should undergo a complete scrubbing with powerful disinfectants or, better still, get demolished and rebuilt from scratch). There are much better cities in Serbia in my opinion.
I had a great time in Nis. It is a very nice city with kind and welcoming people, delicious food and a lot of history. A lot of the older buildings aren't fully renovated but the city has a nice rustic charm to it. I didn't find it to be dirty and I don't think it is anywhere close to being the dirtiest city in Europe.
@@farfromhometravelYes, Niš is a lovely city with a lot of history and a large river, greenery etc. HOWEVER, the vast majority of cities in Europe today use modern systems of deep cleaning streets and this is sadly missing in Niš. In Niš the locals seem to not be bothered by buildings that are (fully or partially) de facto garbage dumps. I spent a total of 10 weeks in Niš in the period April to July and it is probably the only city in Europe where garbage accumulates on some streets in potholes and is never removed. Instead of investing in bushes and decorative trees with pebbles and stones that are anyhow stolen within 48 hours the municipality should arrange for stone (aka heavy) drinking containers for the dogs and cats (some of the dogs live in the surrounding hills and come down to town on hot summer days in search of water. Some kind hearted people put plastic containers and fill them with water for the dogs to drink from but there should be an initiative to clean them and put fresh water in them every day during the summer. Niš municipality has two or three ridiculous old vehicles from the 1990's that meander the roads (never the pavements!) with silly brushes that don't even touch the ground and basically spray water and nothing else every couple of weeks as a face saving measure. The busses are either clean and air conditioned or half broken and stuffy (it depends on luck I guess) but as some locals never heard of deodorant or refuse to use it you are often lucky if you don't get the air conditioned modern bus. As for food it is the same as was probably available in the 1980's Yugoslavia. A lot of artery clogging meat barbequed on the grill (how impressive!) seasoned with only salt and pepper (!) served with industrial french fries (from frozen) and very greasy and salty burek (in most places) though some gems of non-serbian cuisine in a couple of non-serbian restaurants do exist. In conclusion the side streets in the suburbs are relatively clean (though abandoned cars are not a rare sight) but the pedestrian shopping street and much of the center away from the immediate and lovely river front are stinky which is why I stand by my new modified claim that Niš is in the top 2% dirtiest cities in Europe. I hope my constructive criticism will wake up locals to the true state of their environment and bring positive change.
I am sure it is not as dirty as you say... the center seems nice, and most people visit the center. It makes up for it by the history, the food, and the friendly people.
N. I’m really proud of my town, kind people,brave ones, humorous , always ready to show you their hospitality. This time, you could see only a part of if. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
❤❤❤ 1:21
Центар Ниша.
Наш Ниш,царски град .
👍❤️❤️
Love serbia love niş love serbian people hi from turkey
Najlepši grad - istorijski grad, grad predivnih ljudi gde se oseća toplina i gostoprimstvo ❣
Moj najdraži grad ❤❤❤❤
16:15 where is this park?
And also where are those tiny dark streets right after you show the constantine the great’s monument?
👍🥰❤❤Stbija nis
16:20 so thats building where WWI started
The dirtiest city in Serbia and possibly the dirtiest city on the entire European continent.
The fortress and King Milan square are beautiful but the rest of the town is in dire need of a complete overhaul and a deep clean (I suggest to transport the entire population to a clean city like Novi Sad, Sabac or Subotica for a month long course on cleanliness and civil values.
Whilst the course is ongoing the center of town should undergo a complete scrubbing with powerful disinfectants or, better still, get demolished and rebuilt from scratch).
There are much better cities in Serbia in my opinion.
stfu don't disrespect my city like that.
I had a great time in Nis. It is a very nice city with kind and welcoming people, delicious food and a lot of history. A lot of the older buildings aren't fully renovated but the city has a nice rustic charm to it. I didn't find it to be dirty and I don't think it is anywhere close to being the dirtiest city in Europe.
@@farfromhometravelYes, Niš is a lovely city with a lot of history and a large river, greenery etc.
HOWEVER, the vast majority of cities in Europe today use modern systems of deep cleaning streets and this is sadly missing in Niš.
In Niš the locals seem to not be bothered by buildings that are (fully or partially) de facto garbage dumps.
I spent a total of 10 weeks in Niš in the period April to July and it is probably the only city in Europe where garbage accumulates on some streets in potholes and is never removed.
Instead of investing in bushes and decorative trees with pebbles and stones that are anyhow stolen within 48 hours the municipality should arrange for stone (aka heavy) drinking containers for the dogs and cats (some of the dogs live in the surrounding hills and come down to town on hot summer days in search of water.
Some kind hearted people put plastic containers and fill them with water for the dogs to drink from but there should be an initiative to clean them and put fresh water in them every day during the summer.
Niš municipality has two or three ridiculous old vehicles from the 1990's that meander the roads (never the pavements!) with silly brushes that don't even touch the ground and basically spray water and nothing else every couple of weeks as a face saving measure.
The busses are either clean and air conditioned or half broken and stuffy (it depends on luck I guess) but as some locals never heard of deodorant or refuse to use it you are often lucky if you don't get the air conditioned modern bus.
As for food it is the same as was probably available in the 1980's Yugoslavia.
A lot of artery clogging meat barbequed on the grill (how impressive!) seasoned with only salt and pepper (!) served with industrial french fries (from frozen) and very greasy and salty burek (in most places) though some gems of non-serbian cuisine in a couple of non-serbian restaurants do exist.
In conclusion the side streets in the suburbs are relatively clean (though abandoned cars are not a rare sight) but the pedestrian shopping street and much of the center away from the immediate and lovely river front are stinky which is why I stand by my new modified claim that Niš is in the top 2% dirtiest cities in Europe.
I hope my constructive criticism will wake up locals to the true state of their environment and bring positive change.
İ love niş .i been 5 times i m from turkey . beautiful City bud yes not very clean
I am sure it is not as dirty as you say... the center seems nice, and most people visit the center. It makes up for it by the history, the food, and the friendly people.