Tivat and Kotor, though distinct in history, architecture and identity, form one of the most powerful maritime economic ecosystems in the Mediterranean. Together, they represent the yachting…
Browsing: city
Montenegro is often perceived as a tourism-driven economy, yet its real industrial backbone runs through the Podgorica–Danilovgrad–Nikšić corridor, a central axis characterised by manufacturing, metallurgy, energy…
Kotor is Montenegro’s cultural jewel, a UNESCO World Heritage site and one of the most visually striking coastal cities in the Mediterranean. Nestled between steep mountains…
Ulcinj is Montenegro’s southernmost coastal municipality, bordering Albania and overlooking some of the longest sandy beaches on the Adriatic. Its identity is shaped by a blend…
Bar is one of Montenegro’s most strategically important municipalities — not only for tourism, but for trade, logistics, industry and national infrastructure. Home to Montenegro’s largest…
Tivat, once a modest naval town, has transformed into the yachting capital of the Adriatic thanks to the monumental development of Porto Montenegro — one of Europe’s most…
Herceg Novi, positioned at the entrance to the Bay of Kotor and bordering Croatia’s Dubrovnik-Neretva region, is one of Montenegro’s most strategically located coastal municipalities. It…
Cetinje, the historic royal capital of Montenegro, is a city defined by cultural heritage, national identity, architecture, museums, education and arts. While small in population, it…
Nikšić is Montenegro’s industrial backbone — a city shaped by steel, mining, metal processing, manufacturing, energy, construction and a deeply rooted engineering workforce. As the country’s…
Danilovgrad sits in the Zeta valley between Podgorica and Nikšić — geographically central, historically modest, but increasingly visible in Montenegro’s economic landscape. Long considered a quiet…


