Feed Factory, Gratsko North Macedonia Only 61Km from the International Airport

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Feed Factory, Gratsko North Macedonia Only 61Km from the International Airport FEED FACTORY, GRATSKO NORTH MACEDONIA ONLY 61KM FROM THE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT www.silkroadbank.com.mk ABOUT THE FACTORY The feed factory was built as a complex of warehouses and silos for management and mass production of animal feed with focus on corn and wheat as main product. Through supply of raw materials from Serbia and Pelagonia region in North Macedonia, the factory was producing animal feed for all kinds of cattle for many years. With capacity of annual production of 50.000 tons of feed the factory was supplying the whole region with feed packages of 10, 15 and 50kg. Constructed in the early '80 and located 100km from the capital of North Macedonia, Skopje, with the advantage of being in the vicinity of the highway, the factory is easily connected to all parts of Macedonia. Connected to the railway corridor directly from its own yard, this facility takes precedence over many others in terms of distribution of goods. Please call to arrange private viewing +389 70 407 464 www.silkroadbank.com.mk KEY FACTS Location - Industrial zone in Gratsko area, North Macedonia Easy access in the vicinity of the highway Direct access to railway Corridor from its own yard Possibility to be restored and put in function Biggest silos in the region with capacity of 36.000 tons of feed Main production of corn and wheat Please call to arrange private viewing +389 70 407 464 www.silkroadbank.com.mk FACILITY Facility includes: Equipment: Admin Building – a two story facility loading machines with total area of 640 sqm; weight measuring machines 3 warehouses with total area of cleaning machines 2498sqm; grinding machines Security house 8sqm; dosing machines packaging room 60sqm; mixers measuring section 22sqm; 8000kg lift pool with water pump in area of 34sqm; Corn tanks 240sqm; Corn drier 102sqm Three silos in total capacity of 19.000ton; 713sqm feed plant; Workshop 33m2; Please call to arrange private viewing +389 70 407 464 www.silkroadbank.com.mk LOCATION Located in the industrial zone, Gratsko, North Macedonia, the factory is perfectly positioned to supply the whole reagion of farmers with animal feed. 61 km from the International Airport Connected with highway Conected with direct railway access Please call to arrange private viewing +389 70 407 464 www.silkroadbank.com.mk INVESTMENT OPORTUNITY Silk Road Bank is offering an investment opportunity through selling its claims on Mile Market Feed Factory. The property's appraisal value is EUR 800.000 (Appraisal dated 06.06.2018) Please call to arrange private viewing +389 70 407 464 www.silkroadbank.com.mk DISCLAIMER This material has been prepared solely for purposes of illustration and discussion. Under no circumstances should the information contained herein be used or considered as an offer to sell, or solicitation of an offer to buy any security. All information, including performance information, has been prepared in good faith; however Silk Road Bank makes no representation or warranty express or implied, as to the accuracy or completeness of the information, and nothing herein shall be relied upon as a promise or representation as to past or future performance. The information set forth herein was gathered from various sources which Silk Road Bank believes, but does not guarantee, to be reliable. Unless stated otherwise, any opinions expressed herein are current as of the date hereof and are subject to change at any time. Please call to arrange private viewing +389 70 407 464 www.silkroadbank.com.mk.
Recommended publications
  • (2019), the Vardar River As a Border of Semiosphere – Paradox Of
    Geographia Polonica 2019, Volume 92, Issue 1, pp. 83-102 https://doi.org/10.7163/GPol.0138 INSTITUTE OF GEOGRAPHY AND SPATIAL ORGANIZATION POLISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES www.igipz.pan.pl www.geographiapolonica.pl THE VARDAR RIVER AS A BORDER OF SEMIOSPHERE – PARADOX OF SKOPJE REGENERATION Armina Kapusta Urban Regeneration Laboratory Institute of Urban Geography and Tourism Studies Faculty of Geographical Sciences University of Łódź Kopcińskiego 31, 90-142 Łódź: Poland e-mail: [email protected] Abstract As suggested by its etymology, regeneration usually carries positive connotations while its negative aspects tend to be belittled. However, any renewal results in major morphological, physiognomic, functional or social changes, which imply changes in the meanings encoded in space. These transformations are not always welcome and they may lead to public discussions and conflicts. Skopje 2014 is a project within which such controversial transformations have been taking place. The area surrounding the Vardar River and its banks plays a major role here. On the river banks monumental buildings were erected, bridges over the river were modernised and new ones, decorated with monuments, were built for pedestrians. Bridges can be considered a valuable component of any urban infrastructure as they link different parts of a settlement unit (in the case of Skopje – left (northern) bank and the right (southern) bank; Albanian and Macedonian), improve transport, facilitate trade and cultural exchange. In this context, referring to Lotman’s semiosphere theory, they may become borders of semiotic space, which acts as a filter that facilitates the penetration of codes and cultural texts. Yet, in multicultural Skopje meanings attached to bridges seem to lead to social inequalities as they glorify what is Macedonian and degrade the Albanian element.
    [Show full text]
  • Structural Evolution of the Vardar Root Zone, Northern Greece: Discussion and Reply
    Structural evolution of the Vardar root zone, northern Greece: Discussion and reply Discussion C. M. BARTON"' Department of Geology, Sedgwick Museum, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, England Zimmerman and Ross (1976) presented an interpretation of suggested in their abstract. Such well-documented stratigraphic Greek geology in which Vardar ocean crust was eliminated in two ages provide compelling evidence that ophiolite emplacement oc- successive directions (their Fig. 6). Their contribution is welcome, curred significantly before Late Cretaceous time, probably soon although it included a number of points that require clarification. after the first deformation of the Othris margin. A metamorphism First, it is generally agreed that northeast Greece has an ex- of about the same age (Early Cretaceous) is widespread in adjacent tremely complex post-Triassic (Alpine) history. However, in their Pelagonian rocks (Mercier, 1973b). "regional tectonic model" Zimmerman and Ross did not once Because both the direction and age of thrusting associated with specify the approximate dates of tectonism. Second, the Vardar the Othris zone ophiolites are fundamental to any tectonic model of zone is only one of two parallel belts in Greece which contain mafic the Hellenides, their position in Figure 6 of Zimmerman and Ross and ultramafic rocks interpreted as ophiolites. Fragments of similar needs clarifying. Certainly, no fragments of the Othris ocean (the oceanic affinity occur farther west in the Othris (= sub-Pelagonian) Vourinos, Pindos, or Othris ophiolites) could have been derived zone. If the authors' assertion is correct and the Othris zone from an area east of Olympos before Tertiary time, because the ophiolites are rooted farther east, then existing data from this zone Olympos platform records continuous Mesozoic shallow-water (which includes Zimmerman's own [1972] account of the Vourinos sedimentation.
    [Show full text]
  • Political and International Implications of Integrated Water Resources Management of Transboundary River Basins: the Case of Axios/Vardar River Basin”
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE UNIVERSITY OF MACEDONIA DEPARTMENT OF BALKAN, SLAVIC AND ORIENTAL STUDIES MASTER PROGRAMME IN “POLITICS AND ECONOMICS OF CONTEMPORARY EASTERN AND SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE” DISSERTATION “Political and International implications of integrated water resources management of transboundary river basins: The case of Axios/Vardar River basin” MICHAIL I.TSAVDARIDIS Graduate of Political Sciences Thessaloniki 2013 Abstract Abstract The political rivalries over the water resources are highly increased due to their scarcity, several types of pollution, increasing water consumption and several environmental shifts. These tensions are a result of the great number of transboundary river basins worldwide (261). The international institutions promote a remarkable legal framework in order to regulate those dimensions amongst the riparian states. The new EU Water Framework Directive 2000/60 and the decisions of Helsinki convention could be the road map for integrated water resources management (IWRM). In Greece the main renewable resources are “imported” and for this reason the necessity of an IWRM is obvious and a hard task at the same time. This dissertation focuses on the Axios/Vardar river basin and examines the possibility of a possible transnational cooperation in respect of the international law framework. i Table of Contents Table of Contents Abstract .........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Modelling the Environmental Concerns of Constructing the Danube-Morava-Vardar-Thessaloniki Canal Using General Morphological Analysis
    Journal of Sustainable Development of Transport and Logistics journal home page: https://jsdtl.sciview.net Hussain, N., Jovanović Popović, D., & Milinčić, M. (2018). Modelling the environmental Scientific Platform concerns of constructing the Danube-Morava-Vardar-Thessaloniki Canal using General Morphological Analysis. Journal of Sustainable Development of Transport and Logistics, 4(1), 6-16. doi:10.14254/jsdtl.2019.4-1.1. ISSN 2520-2979 Modelling the environmental concerns of constructing the Danube-Morava-Vardar-Thessaloniki Canal using General Morphological Analysis Nasir Hussain *, Dejana Jovanović Popović ** , Miroljub Milinčić *** * Strategy Foresight Ltd, c/o: Bulman A Husain & Co, 258 Merton Road, London SW18 5JL, United Kingdom [email protected] ** Faculty of Security Studies, University of Belgrade, 50 Gospodara Vučića St., 11000 Belgrade, Serbia [email protected] *** Faculty of Geography, University of Belgrade, 3/III Studentski trg, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia [email protected] Abstract: The problem structuring method of General Morphological Analysis was used to explore the factors and uncertainties to be considered in the proposed building of a Article history: canal linking the Morava and Vardar Rivers, which in recent Received: January 28, 2019 years has taken on greater importance given its possible link in 1st Revision: February 19, China’s one belt initiative. Facilitated workshop sessions 2019 identified five main factors – investors, risks, the motivation to Accepted: March 29, 2019 invest, type of investment and long-term benefits – and 19 conditional states resulting in 1440 unique scenarios. Using specialist software and input from subject matter specialists DOI: from the fields of geography, environment and security, 81 10.14254/jsdtl.2019.4-1.1 scenarios were isolated.
    [Show full text]
  • North Macedonia Social Briefing: the Success Story of the Handball Club “Vardar” Against All Odds Anastas Vangeli
    ISSN: 2560-1601 Vol. 19, No. 3 (MK) June 2019 North Macedonia social briefing: The Success Story of the Handball Club “Vardar” Against All Odds Anastas Vangeli 1052 Budapest Petőfi Sándor utca 11. +36 1 5858 690 Kiadó: Kína-KKE Intézet Nonprofit Kft. [email protected] Szerkesztésért felelős személy: Chen Xin Kiadásért felelős személy: Huang Ping china-cee.eu 2017/01 The Success Story of the Handball Club “Vardar” Against All Odds Introduction Handball is perhaps the most popular team sport in North Macedonia (hereinafter Macedonia), or at least the one in which Macedonia has noted the highest number of (and the most meaningful) international successes. The national handball teams (both the female and the male ones) have generally performed well in international competitions, although they have not won a gold medal yet. However, Macedonian professional handball clubs have competed and won at the top level in the past two decades. The early successes were noted by female teams. In 2002, the female handball club Kometal Gjorche Petrov won the European Champions League (it also made the finals in 2000 and 2005), bringing about one of the rare moments of collective nation-wide celebration in what has otherwise been a dark period for Macedonia's society. After years of continuous improvement, male handball clubs also improved their performance. In 2017, the male handball team Vardar won the European Champions League, which has given way for one of the largest celebrations in Macedonia's modern history. Vardar played in the Final Four in 2018, but did not win a medal – while the fans of the team at home remained passionate and supportive.
    [Show full text]
  • DENYING ETHNIC IDENTITY the Macedonians of Greece
    DDDENYING EEETHNIC IIIDENTITY The Macedonians of Greece Human Rights Watch/Helsinki (formerly Helsinki Watch) Human Rights Watch New York $$$ Washington $$$ Los Angeles $$$ London Copyright April 1994 by Human Rights Watch. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 94-75891 ISBN: 1-56432-132-0 Human Rights Watch/Helsinki Human Rights Watch/Helsinki, formerly Helsinki Watch, was established in 1978 to monitor and promote domestic and international compliance with the human rights provisions of the 1975 Helsinki accords. It is affiliated with the International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights, which is based in Vienna. The staff includes Jeri Laber, executive director; Lois Whitman, deputy director; Holly Cartner and Julie Mertus, counsels; Erika Dailey, Rachel Denber, Ivana Nizich and Christopher Panico, research associates; Christina Derry, Ivan Lupis, Alexander Petrov and Isabelle Tin-Aung, associates. The advisory committee chair is Jonathan Fanton; Alice Henkin is vice chair. TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgments.............................................................................................................................................viii Frequently Used Abbreviations................................................................................................................... ix Introduction and Conclusions........................................................................................................................1 Background................................................................................................................................................................4
    [Show full text]
  • Research Paper Rhynchostegium Riparioides and Fontinalis Antipyretica in MACEDONIA
    Journal of Global Biosciences ISSN 2320-1355 Volume 7, Number 6, 2018, pp. 5452-5454 Website: www.mutagens.co.in Research Paper Rhynchostegium riparioides AND Fontinalis antipyretica IN MACEDONIA Agim Haziri University of Tetova, Faculty of Science, Department of Biology, Rr. Ilindenit, 1200 Tetovo, Macedonia. Abstract Rhynchostegium riparioides and Fontinalis antipyretica are specific upstream water mosses of the Vardar River. Vardar River is the largest river in the country. Springs on the slopes of Shara, near the village Vërtok, a few kilometers from the town of Gostivar. Upstream of the Vardar River is characterized by a very interesting aquatic flora. Aquatic flora is mostly epilit and epifil character. It is represented by mosses and algae. These mosses create a sensational underwater vegetation and offer very favorable living environment for nektonic organisms. Key words: Rhynchostegium riparioides, Fontinalis antipyretica, Vardar River, aquatic flora, mosses. INTRODUCTION Vardar River is the largest river in the country. Springs on the slopes of Shara, near the village Vërtok, a few kilometers from the town of Gostivar. Source of the River Vardar is located at 683 m altitude. Macedonian territory reaches a length of 301 km, while its overall length, to the Aegean Sea, totaling 388 km. Upstream of the Vardar River running through Pollog Valley. The annual average water temperature of the Vardar River is 11.8 ˚C, in July and August maximum of 17.8 ˚C, while the minimum recorded in January of 5.9 ˚C. Physico-chemical parameters entered and heavy metals, organic compounds and inorganic sediments, turbulence, etc. Its upstream, characterized by a very interesting flora, mainly of epilits character.
    [Show full text]
  • „ Project Vardar Valley“
    „ PROJECT VARDAR VALLEY“ Prepared by: Department of Development and Investments Skopje, 2016 Vardar Valley INTRODUCTION The area of the Vardar Valley has been the focus of interest in its current development and particularly in the last two decades. These interests amplify depending on the specific geopolitical and economic situation of our country, and various aspects of integration of the interest to landscape this area into the development plans at the regional level, as well as the specific interests of developing the economy as a whole. The complex landscaping of the Vardar Valley will include: - Construction of facilities for energy use; - Construction of systems for the development of agriculture; - Construction of systems for the development of tourism industry, sport and recreation; Hydro-energy utilization of the river Vardar has been studied in several phases. So far, some basic designs have been prepared on individual hydro-technical facilities. Simultaneously, shorter stretches of the main stream of the Vardar or its tributaries have been handled. There are also some considerations regarding the general solution of the river Vardar’s entire basin. The Vardar Valley Programme envisages energy use of the Vardar stream and its most important tributaries. On the Vardar stream, which means the water-flow stretch from Skopje to the border with Greece, which is 200 km long, 12 hydro-power plants have been planned for construction, of which the major ones are: Veles HPP with a production of 300 million kWh and Gradec HPP with 257 million kWh. Other smaller hydro-power plants have been deployed in cascades down the river stream, with a production of 60 to 130 million kWh, depending on the location and flow [7].
    [Show full text]
  • Heraldry in Macedonia with Special Regard to the People's/Socialist
    genealogy Article Heraldry in Macedonia with Special Regard to the People’s/Socialist Republic of Macedonia until 1991 Jovan Jonovski Macedonian Heraldic Society, 1000 Skopje, North Macedonia; [email protected] or [email protected]; Tel.: +389-70-252-989 Abstract: Every European region and country has some specific heraldry. In this paper, we will consider heraldry in the People’s/Socialist Republic of Macedonia, understood by the multitude of coats of arms, and armorial knowledge and art. Due to historical, as well as geographical factors, there is only a small number of coats of arms and a developing knowledge of art, which make this paper’s aim feasible. This paper covers the earliest preserved heraldic motifs and coats of arms found in Macedonia, as well as the attributed arms in European culture and armorials of Macedonia, the кing of Macedonia, and Alexander the Great of Macedonia. It also covers the land arms of Macedonia from the so-called Illyrian Heraldry, as well as the state and municipal heraldry of P/SR Macedonia. The paper covers the development of heraldry as both a discipline and science, and the development of heraldic thought in SR Macedonia until its independence in 1991. Keywords: heraldry of Macedonia; coats of arms of Macedonia; socialist heraldry; Macedonian municipal heraldry 1. Introduction Macedonia, as a region, is situated on the south of Balkan Peninsula in Southeast Citation: Jonovski, Jovan. 2021. Europe. The traditional boundaries of the geographical region of Macedonia are the lower Heraldry in Macedonia with Special Néstos (Mesta in Bulgaria) River and the Rhodope Mountains to the east; the Skopska Crna Regard to the People’s/Socialist Gora and Shar mountains, bordering Southern Serbia, in the north; the Korab range and Republic of Macedonia until 1991.
    [Show full text]
  • Danube Strategy – Strategic Significance for Serbia
    The Institute of International Politics and Economics DANUBE STRATEGY – STRATEGIC SIGNIFICANCE FOR SERBIA Edited by Nevenka Jeftić Šarčević Edita Stojić Karanović Belgrade, 2012 Danube Strategy – Strategic Significance for Serbia Publisher Institute of International Politics and Economics, Makedonska 25, Belgrade For the Publisher Duško Dimitrijević, Ph.D., Director Editors in Chief Nevenka Jeftić Šarčević, Ph.D. Edita Stojić Karanović, Ph.D. Editorial Board a.o. Univ. Prof. Joachim Becker, Ph.D. International Economics and Development, Department of Economics, Vienna, University of Economics and Business Prof. Silvo Devetak, Ph.D. Head, Department of International Law and International Relations, Faculty of Law, University of Maribor, Maribor, Slovenia Dragan Đukanović, Ph.D. Institute of International Politics and Economies, Belgrade, Serbia Cover Design Snežana Vojković Layout Sanja Pavlović Printed by “Želnid”, Belgrade ISBN 978-86-7067-167-6 The publication was financially supported by the Ministry of Education and Science, Republic of Serbia. Contents Preface to the compendium ........................................................................................ 7 Chapter I STRATEGIC SIGNIFICANCE OF THE DANUBE RIVER AND REGIONAL CO-OPERATION IN ITS BASIN Grigorij Meseznikov THE DANUBE REGIONAL COOPERATION AS A PLATFORM FOR BOOSTING SERBIA’S CHANCES IN EURO-INTEGRATION: SOME POLITICAL CONSIDERATIONS .................................................................. 13 Sandor Götz SHIPPING ON THE WATERS OF SEE REGION OVER-BRIDGING
    [Show full text]
  • Macedonia: Far More Than a Name to Greece Dean M
    Hastings International and Comparative Law Review Volume 18 Article 5 Number 2 Winter 1995 1-1-1995 Macedonia: Far More Than a Name to Greece Dean M. Poulakidas Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.uchastings.edu/ hastings_international_comparative_law_review Part of the Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, and the International Law Commons Recommended Citation Dean M. Poulakidas, Macedonia: Far More Than a Name to Greece, 18 Hastings Int'l & Comp. L. Rev. 397 (1995). Available at: https://repository.uchastings.edu/hastings_international_comparative_law_review/vol18/iss2/5 This Note is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Journals at UC Hastings Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Hastings International and Comparative Law Review by an authorized editor of UC Hastings Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Macedonia: Far More Than a Name to Greece By DEAN M. POULAKIDAS* Table of Contents I. Introduction ............................................ 397 II. The Ancient History Behind the Name "Macedonia"... 399 III. The History of the Land and Peoples of Macedonia: From Antiquity to Modernity ........................... 405 IV. The Creation of Yugoslavia and a Second "M acedonia" ............................................ 421 V. Skopje: Its Continued Expansionist Threat and Its Fight for International Recognition Under the Name "M acedonia" ............................................ 429 VI. Conclusion .............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Radioecological of the Vardar River Catchment Area After the Chernobyl
    XA9745822 RADIOECOLOGY OF THE VARDAR RIVER CATCHMENT AREA AFTER THE CHERNOBYL RELEASE L. CVETANOVSKA Center for Application of Radioisotopes in Science and Industry "Skopje", Skopje, FYR of Macedonia T. ANOVSKI University "St. Kiril and Metodij", Skopje, FYR of Macedonia 1. INTRODUCTION Vardar river with its length of 301.6 km and its catchment area of 28,338 km^ covers almost 80% of the territory of the Republic of Macedonia Various usage of the surface and underground water flows of this hydro system (water supply, irrigation, etc.) to which gravitate cca 2/3 of the population of our Country, are subject of increased interest for their protection. In this sense, radioecological investigations (due to a presence of a local not well prospected uranium deposits and a factory for phosphate fertilisers) were in progressfl]. Immediately, after the first information for me Chernobyl disaster from the 26th of April, 1986, as a result of the accident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, and the registered increased level of radioactive contamination of the environment of our Country, our research work as well as the activity in the Republical Institute for Occupational Hygiene and in the Institute for Veterinary, both, also from Skopje, have been intensified As a result of unusual high amount of precipitation, in May 1986, the contamination of the whole country was expected to be increased, and this fact was confirmed later on. According to this, appropriate recomendaiions and activities to the population were suggested, as well as adequate protective measures have been taken. The fi/st preliminary results of performed gamma-spectrometric analysis showed that besides many others, the following isotopes: 1-131,1-132, Cs-134, Cs-137 and Ru- 103, dominated into the investigated water, air and food samples[2].
    [Show full text]