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  1. Bratislava. St Martin's Cathedral ( Slovak: Katedrála svätého Martina or Dóm svätého Martina, Hungarian: Szent Márton-dóm or Koronázó templom, German: Kathedrale des Heiligen Martin) is a church in Bratislava, Slovakia, and the cathedral of the Archdiocese of Bratislava . It is situated at the western border of the historical city ...

  2. www.bratislava.sk 布拉迪斯拉瓦 ( 斯洛伐克語 : Bratislava , 斯洛伐克语发音: [ˈbracislaʋa] ( ⓘ ) ;舊稱 普雷斯堡 ( Prešporok 、德語: Pressburg 、 匈牙利語 : Pozsony )是 斯洛伐克共和国 的首都和最大城市,面积约367平方公里,人口約为470544人,是欧洲最小的 ...

  3. The Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava ( Slovak: Vysoká škola múzických umení v Bratislave, abbr. VŠMU) is a university founded on June 9, 1949. [1] The university consists of three faculties: Theatre Faculty (Acting, Directing, Dramaturgy, Stage and Costume Design, Puppetry, Theatre Theory, Theatre Management)

  4. The Bratislava Region is the wealthiest and economically most prosperous region of Slovakia, despite being the smallest by area and having the second smallest population of the eight Slovak regions. It accounts for about 26% of the Slovak GDP. [6] The GDP per capita ( PPP) is 188% (2016) of the EU average which is the fifth highest of all ...

  5. The Volkswagen Bratislava Plant is an automotive factory and co-located test track owned by Volkswagen Group in Bratislava, Slovakia. History [ edit ] Funded by the ruling Communist Party to expand car production across Czechoslovakia , it agreed a partnership in 1969 with Italian automaker Alfa Romeo , but the proposed new model was never ...

  6. Church of the Holy Spirit. Church of the Holy Spirit is a church in Bratislava, Slovakia . The cornerstone was sanctified by Pope John Paul II. It is an atypical building with an unusual roof, 30m high. It has a circular shape and consists of church and pastoral sections. The church was designed by architects Ľudovít Režucha and Marián Lupták.

  7. Capacity. 3200. Construction. Opened. 1962. Architect. Jozef Chovanec. Eurovia Arena (formerly known as Hant Arena) is a multi-use arena in Bratislava. [1] The arena has distinct shape made of two crossing parabolic arches covered by a suspended rope structure.

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