Kumodraž is located in the central-eastern part of the municipality, in the lower section of the Kumodraž field, in the valley of the creek of Kumodraški potok. Eastern and southern borders of the neighborhood are marked by a series of hills: Torlak, Golo Brdo, Stražarska Kosa, and the Kumodraž area is a source of many other creeks apart from the one that gave its name to the neighborhood: Rakovički potok, Lipica, Zavojnička reka, Bubanj potok, Kamena voda, etc. To the north, Kumodraž is bordered by the neighborhood of Voždovac, to the north-west by Veliki Mokri Lug and to the east by Jajinci.
Population
Population of Kumodraž by the official censuses of population:
1921 - 1,321
1971 - 8,547
2002 - 13,004
2011 - 13,343
Characteristics
A Roman aqueduct used to conduct water from the Kumodraž Hill. At some point it was joining the aqueduct from the Mokri Lug Hill, and then continued further to the Singidunum castrum. Both Mokri Lug and Kumodraž are hills, so the natural inclination allowed for the water to flow downhill to Singidunum. During the pre-World War I period, Kumodraž had its own municipality which stretched north to the eastern outskirts of Belgrade, comprising outer city suburbs, today neighborhoods, like Dušanovac. Kumodraž used to be a small, agricultural village far from downtown Belgrade, but after the 1960s the population boosted as it was case in almost all Belgrade's suburbs at the time. In the 1970s Kumodraž was administratively declared a local community within the municipality of Voždovac, rather than being a separate settlement. Today, Kumodraž makes one continuous built up area, even though it is about 10 kilometers away from downtown. It is divided into several sub-neighborhoods: Kumodraž, Kumodraž I, Kumodraž II and Torlak. One of the most important Serbian army leaders in modern history, vojvodaStepa Stepanović, was born in Kumodraž in 1856 and his birthplace is turned into memorial-house dedicated to him, and the nearby woods is named Stepin Lug. In addition, the main street in Kumodraž is named Vojvode Stepe. There is a Church of the Holy Trinity in the neighborhood. Next to it is a small cemetery which hosts the memorial to the Serbian soldiers killed during the short Austro-Hungarian occupation of Belgrade in the late 1914, within the scopes of the World War I. A memorial was erected on the location of the 1914-1915 seat of the Belgrade Defense Headquarters. Old Meyhane in located in the central part of the former village. It was built in 1865 as the Ottoman watchpost along the Kragujevac Road. Serbian government later adapted it into the gendarmerie post while in World War I it was turned into the mayhane and then into the military hospital. Later it became kafana, grocery store and library of the "Vojvoda Stepa" elementary school. In time, the arcade porch was replaced with the architrave one and the roof shingles were replaced with the proper roof tiles. It was placed under the preliminary state protection, but became derelict in time.
Kumodraž I
Central and western extension of the neighborhood, the core of the modern settlement of Kumodraž. It extends into Kumodraž II on the east, Kumodraž II on the north and Torlak on the north-west. Connected to Belgrade by the bus lines 33 and 39.
Kumodraž II
Northern extension of the neighborhood, which makes urban connection to the neighborhood of Voždovac is named Kumodraž II. It is a modern sub-neighborhood, located in the area marked by the elbow turn of the Kumodraška street and the street of Vojvode Stepe. It makes a direct extension of the Voždovac's industrial zone along the Kumodraška street. Connected to Belgrade by the bus line 25.
Torlak
The entire western section of Kumodraž is a sub-neighborhood of Torlak. It was named after the 308 meters-high hill of Torlak, which was very important in the military operations for the defense of Belgrade in World War I. The Institute for pharmacology of Serbia and the Institute for immunobiology and virusology are located in the area.