Touring The Bombed Out Buildings of Mostar, Bosnia [UPDATED FOR 2024]

Why take the tour:

We had already set out to find many of the bombed out buildings during our time in the city. The history of the war in Bosnia was something that really fascinated us. Much with our interest in the troubles of Northern Ireland, with Bosnia it was a war that we remembered. One that we grew up with on the television, the Bosnian refugees faces that flashed up on a daily basis. But as a child we never really knew what was actually happening over here, we were too young to know, but we clearly remember the headlines and news flashes. It felt much more relevant to us than something like the second world war, a time in history that we almost find to hard to comprehend living through.

But the wars in Yugoslavia, and Northern Ireland for that matter, felt more real, less like a far gone time in history. Walking around Mostar this comes even more into focus, you can’t help but see the ruins even if you have no interest in knowing about them. But we also felt quite ignorant as to what really happened here, the pieces of information we had picked up over the years painted a complex story. We wanted to clear it up once and for all!

Some background:

The first impressions of Mostar are an intense hit of Ottoman culture, it kind of took us by surprise. We almost felt like we had taken a wrong turn and ended up in Turkey, the minarets pointing proudly into the blue sky displaying a much higher Muslim population than we ever imagined. We knew a little of the multicultural nature of this area of Europe, but were rather unprepared for the therapeutic calls to prayer we had grown used to during our trips to Turkey.

The ruins also hit you hard and quickly, from the bridge the first huge ruin is only a few hundred metres. Once the first captures your interest you see them all, ghosts that the locals walk past like an elephant in the room. Scars dotted around almost every corner of the city. You would be forgiven initially for thinking this was a city of ruins, but as Miran took us around the city, showing us photos of the extent of the destruction that Mostar suffered you begin to see an opposing picture.

It almost seems like a miracle that Mostar is even still here to be explored, rather than a city of ruins it is a city of regeneration, a Phoenix whose colourful wings fly high, shimmering in the late spring sun, but look closely and there are scars, patched up feathers and a heart that still aches.

Maybe it is sad that these shells still stand, that people still live inside houses pockmarked with bullet holes and hastily plastered shell holes. But then again maybe some should alway remain, as a reminder and as a memorial to what this place has had to battle through to one again become a place of such beauty.

It is quite hard to put into words how Miran managed to explain the entire war and what happened and why in Mostar. We had a 2-3 hour tour in which it was explained from start to finish whilst we visited the important positions and sites of the conflict. I almost feel like I am in am impossible situation trying to explain it in one post, it is something that could and has been written about in detail.

What I can say is that the situation in Mostar was particularly complex compared to places such as Sarajevo. The scars of that particular time still divide what from the outside appears to be the perfect example of multiculturalism. It is also true today that Bosnia is a complicated country politically, there is still a region, the republic of Srpka, where the Bosnian Serbs live and they pretty much rules themselves with different rules and laws.

The more I learn about Bosnia the more my head spins! Bosnia has always been a society full of a mixture of people, the churches and mosque dating back centuries are a testament to that. But during the time of the unification of Yugoslavia people moved here and there. Croats and Serbs made homes in Bosnia as did many Bosnia’s in other parts of the country.

Book a Tour

Best Place to Book Tour

As much as we love independent travelling, sometimes the best way to access certain places, experience local culture and get real authentic information is on a tour.

For the best trips, tours and guides we always use Get Your Guide.

People were different, but they lived under one country, they married between them and it kind of worked. But below the surface the people still had their own identities and nationalities. It is no wonder then that Tito is still regarded in such high esteem in the Former Yugoslavian countries, for all his flaws, he held this country and its mixture of people together as one.

I am still unsure on the exact details, but what happened turned neighbour against neighbour. The fragile allegiance between the Bosnian’s and the Croats, fighting the common enemy of the Serbs, broke down once the croats made land grabs. Muslim families were evicted from their houses to cross the river and create a divided society, many were even shot at as they fled with all they could carry.

These dividing lines still exist here today, people are brought up to hate the other side, taught separately and live separate lives. Miran expressed his hope that in generations to come, once those who lived though this bitter conflict are gone, that the young people will begin integrating once again.

Vicious fighting gripped the city for over a year, the Serbs and croats using the mountains and the river to strangle it. Cutting off communication and creating a front line out of the main boulevard. People were trapped, the city was in ruins and eventually the Stari Most fell into the icy waters below. This was the moment the world woke up to the killing and destruction that was going on here.

Where we explored: 

The tour began and ended in the mountains that frame the city. A picture perfect place at first glance, the stunning emerald river flowing through an ancient Ottoman city with mountain surrounding it, paradise! Yet these exact features are the things that made the siege even more deadly. The mountains trapped the everyday people of Mostar in a conflict they wanted no part in.

Only a few roads lead in and out and the serbs and Croats had them under control, sitting in the mountains with long range weapons and blocking any way in or out. We even found a bunker up here complete with empty bullet shells from which the Serbs would fire on the city below. Even today you should never stray off the paths up here, landmines remain as a deadly reminder of what was once a battle field, no matter how beautiful it looks today.

Heading down into the city we saw many of the ruins up close, somewhere hotels, offices, apartments, everyday places that became the front line. This front line still divides the city today, this scene of complete destruction is home to many of the bombed out buildings and yet has mad a miraculous recovery…physically if not amongst the people.

The images Miran showed us of this street are really quite shocking, bullets and bombs reduced it to all but rubble. And yet many of these same buildings are still recognisable as the same ones standing here today. This really gives you a more focused image of an everyday city at war and how the people suffered the most.

Other explorations outside of the tour:

Miran showed us around many of the ruins of the city, Tito’s palace of course was one of the stops we had looked forward to seeing. But it was the Sniper tower that captured our imagination the most. A modern triangular shaped bank building, once clad in shimmering black glass, bringing this Ottoman city into the world of the 1990’s.

People coming and going, off to work or sort their finances out. Now a crumbling shell, a haunting vantage point used by snipers to shoot anything that moved. Miran told us of the dangers within, mostly from those who use the buildings to shoot up or sleep rough in.

Having explored many abandoned buildings in the past we scoped it out for a while, the breeze block walls used to close up the entrances were poorly and hastily put together. Getting in would be easy, but this isn’t home, this is a ruin of the Bosnian war.

We hopped over the walls and decided to go for it. Walking up the open stair well we felt like we was walking within history itself. Thankful the building was empty and relatively safe, climbing to the top floor you really got a sense of the scale of the front line of Mostar and how this building in particular played such a heartless but strategically important role.

The feelings the tour left us with

To say we were shell shocked would be an understatement. After the tour finished and we were left in the centre of this city we now knew so much more about we were silent, still taking much of it in. Seeing many things with new eyes, left with an air of sadness and yet a strange optimism.

The rebuilding of this city continues, one day these strange monuments to what happened will all be gone, the scars will have healed on the surface. It has taken 20 years and still many of them remain, but it if the city itself can be rebuilt them maybe one day so too can the relationships of the people here.

But for us, as much as we loved the bridge and the old town, this was the Mostar that will stay with us. A city still raw and yet slowly healing, those images from the television became real, the stories where someones life and in turn Bosnia began to also steal our hearts. Hearing such emotion can’t not have that effect upon you.

We took the “Mostar Shelters” tour with Miran from iHouse travel:

Sort Your Tours Out

Best Place to Organise Your Tour & Much More

Another great site to check out if you’re looking to book tickets or organise a tour is Viator.

Viator often offers different tours to other companies, ones that aren’t otherwise available or have tickets still on sale.

Book Your Accommodation

The Best Place to Book Your Next Stay

Every traveller loves themselves some awesome accommodation.

Whether that’s a kickass hostel with epic facilities, a luxurious hotel for chilling out or even a guest house or homestay for a unique experience.

Here at The Roaming Renegades we book any and all of our stays via Booking.com. We love their range of accommodation types, safety features and loyalty program.

Click the button below to find an unbeatable place to stay!