According to data from the Ministry of Culture, only three non-religious sites owned by Serbs have protected status in Kosovo: two old houses in the western village of Velika Hoca/Hoqa e Madhe and a mill in Novoberda/Novo Brdo, in the east. The mill in Novoberda/Novo Brdo, restored by the United Nations Development Program with funds from the Ministry of Culture, has become a local historical landmark.

Milivoje Milic, a pensioner who grew up in the village, recalls that there used to be about 30 mills along its streams and is excited to see the renovated mill.
Milos Milenkovic, professor of Ethnology and Anthropology at the University of Belgrade, emphasizes that the protection of the cultural heritage of minorities is an important issue in other parts of the former Yugoslavia, not only in Kosovo. There is an underrepresentation of minority heritage and a contested cultural heritage due to a conflictive past. Milenkovic advocates for strategies that contribute to the depoliticization of heritage and that establish regional cooperation and coherent approaches in policymaking and education.