Le district de Golovec est l'un des 17 districts de la municipalité de Ljubljana. Il tire son nom de la colline boisée de Golovec, au sud-est de l'agglomération de Ljubljana, s'élevant jusqu'à 450 m au lieu-dit Mazovnik. Le district est limitrophe des districts du Centre à l'ouest, dont il est séparé par le canal Gruber, de Moste au nord, qui est sur l'autre rive de la Ljubljanica, de Sostro à l'est, au-delà de l'autoroute A1, et de Rudnik à l'ouest.
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The Golovec District, or simply Golovec, is a district of the City Municipality of Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia. It encompasses Golovec Hill, which dates back to the Carboniferous period and consists of clastic rock.
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The National Education Institute Slovenia - NEI is the main public organisation in Slovenia responsible for development in pre-university education in Slovenia — covering all kindergartens, elementary schools, secondary schools, music schools, and boarding schools.
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Kodeljevo Sports Park is a multi-purpose stadium in Ljubljana, Slovenia. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of ND Slovan. The stadium opened in 1959 and the main stand was built in 1965.
It is located in a larger sports complex, which includes a multi-purpose arena, an Olympic swimming pool and tennis courts.
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The Fabiani Bridge is a two-level bridge over the Ljubljanica River in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia. It links Njegoš Street with Rog Street and thus completes the Ljubljana's inner ring road. The bridge has been named after its original conceptor Max Fabiani and was opened to the public on 22 August 2012. The architect in charge of the design was Jurij Kobe.
On 23 August in the morning, a day after the opening of the bridge, a severe balloon accident happened at the Ljubljana Marsh, several kilometres away. The Fabiani Bridge significantly shortened the pathway of ambulances driving the injured from the site of accident to the Ljubljana University Medical Centre, located in the vicinity of the bridge.
Planning and realization of the bridge have been criticized since the beginning of its planning because it disadvantages cyclists and pedestrians who are not allowed to use the upper part of the bridge, which links Njegoš Street and Rog Street directly, and are confined to using the lower level, which connects to Rog Street via a set of inclined sidepaths on the Šuštar Embankment.
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The Ljubljanica Sluice Gate, or the Partition, is a sluice gate and a triumphal arch on the Ljubljanica River in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia. It is located between Cukrarna and Vraz Square in the Center District, east of the Ljubljana old town, a bit downstream of Ambrož Square. It was designed in 1939 by the Slovene architect Jože Plečnik, who envisaged it as a monumental farewell to the Ljubljanica River on its exit from the Ljubljana city centre. It was planned to be used as a footbridge as well. The sluice gate was built with difficulty from 1940 until 1943 by the constructor Matko Curk. Since July 2009, it has been protected as a monument of national significance, along with other major works by Plečnik. Since August 2021, the Ljubljanica Sluice Gate has been inscribed as part of Plečnik's legacy on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
Il a incorporé plusieurs villages, dont certains sont attestés depuis le Moyen Âge : Bizovik, Štepanja Vas, Zgornja et Spodnja Hrušica.