The pioneer park is one of the central Belgrade parks, located between the Boulevard of King Alexander and the streets of King Milan, Prince Miloš and Dragoslav Jovanović.
By 1944 he was threatened with a high wall and served as a garden of the Old Palace (now the Assembly of the City of Belgrade). By removing the wall, the park was handed over for public use and it was named Pionirski Park, according to the same name organization of the youngest. At the corner of the Boulevard of King Alexander Street and Prince Miloš, there remained a bunch of stones that looked like the observation post at Kajmakčalan, where the young kings Aleksandar, Tomislav and Andrej played the war. Today there are memorial plaques with the figure and name of all Serbian soldiers from the First World War.
The building of the New Palace was built as a residence of the royal family. According to the project of architect Stojan Titelbaha, construction began in 1912 and was completed only after the First World War. King Aleksandar I Karadjordjevic stayed in Novi Dvor until the construction of the Dvor on Dedinje. From 1934 to 1948, there was the Museum of Prince Paul or the National Museum. Today it is a building where the office of the President of the Republic of Serbia is located.
In honor of the great genius of Yugoslav literature and nobleman Ivo Andric, between the Pionirski Park and Kraljevo Milan Street, a promenade called Andric's Wreath was built, and a monument was erected.