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- Hooliganism, and nothing more.
- Popular destinations.
- The obelisk at the Brașov train station immediately puts visitors in a serious mood. Don’t trust Google maps and be careful with tickets.
- Canistherapy on a cloudy day.
- Both girls look at you like you’re a tourist.
- Transparent Brașov metaphor about crowned stumps.
- Expensive hotel with cute facade. All four figures above the windows are different.
- The Black Church was founded in the 14th century, completed in the 15th, charred during the Great Turkish War. The light stone is a restoration.
- The word of the Lord endureth forever, but right now it’s a quarter to four, if anyone is interested.
- Reformer and educator Johannes Honter converted the Black Church to Lutheranism and published a textbook on cosmography in verse.
- Ant and peanut benches in the backyard of the church.
- Neo-Byzantine Greek Church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary. Severely damaged by the Vrancea earthquake, restored in 1973.
- Its patio is quite nice.
- Healthy traditions on “Joy Square”.
- Landscape design.
- A non-canonical Charlie Chaplin takes pictures with children and gives out candy.
- Memorial to the Martyrs of Brașov (victims of the Romanian Revolution of 1989) near the prefecture building.
- The main post office and a piece of the city hall.
- Stunning works of Romanian photographers and another piece.
- Well, some are fine without leaves.
- Wonderful oriels, balconies and frames.
- A playpen (sometimes a fountain) on the main square.
- Rope Street is one of the narrowest in Europe. There’s no living space on the walls.
- People here generally love free art.
- They keep the body in good shape, too.
- Carved gate of the Weavers’ Bastion (closed). You should have come earlier, that’s why.
- Tennis courts near the Sports Palace and the Weavers’ Bastion.
- A stoned boar at the Catherine’s Gate is the least monstrous of a dozen animals in the same style.
- Fortress walls in the northwestern part of the city.
- Hobbit tavern between the walls.