
Skopje, Macedonia
What to Visit in Skopje
Every corner of this ancient city has a story. Here are the ones you shouldn't miss.

Stand where antiquity meets ambition.
Macedonia Square
The Grand Stage of Modern Skopje
Macedonia Square is the beating heart of modern Skopje and the largest public square in the country. Dominated by the monumental equestrian statue of Alexander the Great, flanked by neoclassical government buildings and fountains, it's the centrepiece of the ambitious Skopje 2014 urban transformation project that reimagined the city through the lens of its ancient Macedonian heritage.

A 21-metre arch of ambition, history, and Macedonian pride — walk through it and enter another era.
Porta Macedonia
The Triumphal Gate of Modern Skopje
Porta Macedonia (Gate of Macedonia) is a monumental triumphal arch standing 21 metres tall at the south end of Macedonia Square, built in 2012 as part of the Skopje 2014 urban transformation project. Its four facades are covered with 33 marble relief panels depicting key moments in Macedonian history — from Alexander the Great through Ottoman rule to independence. Lit dramatically at night, it has become one of Skopje's most photographed landmarks.

The bridge that watches you back — two giant stone eyes standing guard over the Vardar.
Eye Bridge
Skopje's Most Distinctive Pedestrian Crossing
The Eye Bridge (Oceto Most / Oko Most) is a pedestrian bridge crossing the Vardar River, connecting the city centre to the Macedonia Square area. Its defining feature is two monumental stone eye sculptures — one at each end — that gaze out over the river. Designed by sculptor Valentino Stefanovski and architect Aleksander Bucev, the bridge opened in 2014 as part of the Skopje 2014 project. It is one of the city's most surreal and striking urban art landmarks.

The clock on this building stopped at 5:17am on 26 July 1963 — and was never repaired. It is the most powerful monument to the earthquake that flattened Skopje.
Museum of the City of Skopje
The Clock That Stopped at 5:17
The Museum of the City of Skopje is housed in the city's original railway station building, whose facade clock was frozen at 5:17am — the exact moment the 1963 earthquake struck, killing over 1,000 people and destroying 80% of the city. Inside, the museum holds the city's complete historical archive: Ottoman-era maps, photographs of old Skopje, the original earthquake relief master plan by Japanese architect Kenzo Tange, personal testimonies, and exhibits tracing the city from ancient times to the present.