Dhaka-Facts
    - Good to know
    I Am Greta

    Our city map of Dhaka (Bangladesh) shows 29,650 km of streets and paths. If you wanted to walk them all, assuming you walked four kilometers an hour, eight hours a day, it would take you 927 days. And, when you need to get home there are 801 bus and tram stops, and subway and railway stations in Dhaka.

    With a total area of 6 square kilometers, public green spaces and parks make up 0.029% of Dhaka’s total area, 20,413 square kilometers. That means each of Dhaka’s 21,741,000 residents has an average of 0.3 square meters.

    When people in Dhaka want to go out, they are spoilt for choice; our map shows more than 115 cafés, restaurants, bars, ice-cream parlors, beer gardens, cinemas, nightclubs and theatres. The city also boasts more than 252 sights and monuments, and far more than 9,979 retailers. Feeling tired? Our map shows more than 395 hotels and guest houses, where you can rest.




    • Map download service

      City, regional and country maps from Kober-Kuemmerly+Frey can be generated with the optimum print or screen resolution for every application. Use our maps in your image brochures and travel catalogues, or on your website. Or add an attractive location map to your real estate flyer. I Am Greta

    The following companies use maps from mapz.com

    • Marlit-Christine Heinersdorff
      LOOXX* magazine
      Thanks to mapz.com, the service city map in our LOOXX* magazine uses our corporate colors. Brilliant!
    • Dieter C. Rangol
      German Swimming Pool Federation
      mapz.com gives our member companies rapid, easy access to professionally designed location maps for their websites, brochures and catalogues.
    • Daniel Tolksdorf
      Aengevelt Real Estate
      mapz.com offers the best looking maps for our high-quality real estate flyers.
    • Silja Schelp
      Humboldt Travel
      mapz.com helps us create attractive maps showing the special features of our tours, anywhere in the world.

    I Am Greta | 8K |

    This blog post explores the 2020 documentary which offers a behind-the-scenes look at the life of climate activist Greta Thunberg . Behind the Raincoat: A Review of "I Am Greta"

    : The film dispels myths that Greta is a "puppet" of her parents. Instead, it shows her as the driving force behind her family’s lifestyle changes, such as convincing them to stop eating meat and quit flying.

    While the film is a character study, it serves as a stark reminder of our shared moral responsibility. It highlights that "no one is too small to make a difference," but it also leaves viewers with a critical question: why are we leaving this fight to our children?. 'I Am Greta' film review - Greta Thunberg documentary

    : One of the most heartbreaking scenes captures Greta sobbing during her 2019 wind-powered voyage across the Atlantic. She expresses the crushing burden of feeling like the weight of the planet's future rests on her shoulders.

    : A central narrative is the divide between the youth who will inherit the future and the older generation of leaders who hold the current political and economic power. What We Can Learn

    Unlike many documentaries that use talking heads to explain a subject, Grossman lets Greta speak for herself. The film is largely constructed from footage captured from the very beginning of her school strike. We see her not just as a global icon, but as a teenager navigating the world with Asperger's syndrome—a trait she describes as her "superpower" because it allows her to "see through the noise" and focus entirely on the climate crisis. Key Themes in the Film