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Nutterbug
Dec 10, 2006, 12:08 PM
Giant tent to be built in Astana
By Natalia Antelava
BBC News, Astana

Kazakhstan has unveiled a new architectural project for its capital Astana - a giant transparent tent that will contain an indoor city.

The 150m-high (500ft) dome, designed by UK architect Norman Foster, will be built in just over a year.

The tent is being made from special material that absorbs sunlight to create the effect of summer inside.

Astana lies in the very heart of the Central Asian steppe. Temperatures there often drop to -30C in the winter.

'Difficult project'

The final shape of the world's biggest tent was revealed in a 3D model by Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev.

Underneath, in an area larger than 10 football stadiums, will be a city with squares and cobbled streets, canals, shopping centres and golf courses.

The idea is to recreate summer, so that when the outside temperature is -30C, the residents of the Kazakh capital can play outdoor tennis, take boat rides or sip coffee on the pavement cafes.

Called Khan Shatyry, the project is designed by Lord Foster, who has recently built a giant glass pyramid in Astana.

"Nothing of the sort has been done before, and from the engineering point of view it's an extremely difficult project," says Fettah Tamince, the head of Turkey's development company Sembol that is building the tent.

Mr Tamince is nevertheless confident the company can complete the construction in just 12 months.

'Huge risk'

It is a hugely ambitious undertaking, but so is Astana itself.

It was just over 10 years ago that President Nazarbayev decided to move the capital from Almaty to the very heart of Kazakhstan.

Since then the government says it has spent $15bn (£7.7bn) on construction, although some believe the figure is actually much higher.

For this oil rich state, which is an increasingly important global energy player, cash is not a problem.

Still, Mr Nazarbayev recently told the BBC that moving the capital was the riskiest step he had ever taken, and that Astana was one of his biggest achievements.

"It was a huge risk, and I took it intuitively," Mr Nazarbayev said.

"I put everything at stake, including my career and my name. I knew if I had failed it would be a fatal failure, but the success would also be the real success."

At the time, the president added, no-one seemed to believe that he would be able to create a real city in the steppe.

But the Astana skyline still looks more surreal than real - with its marble palaces, shining skyscrapers, metal structures and abstract statues, all surrounded by vast, snow covered emptiness.

Soon, rising above it all, will be the illuminated glass dome of the Khan Shatyry - an appropriate addition, it seems, to Astana's oil-money fuelled architectural extravaganza.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/6165267.stm

Published: 2006/12/09 19:03:43 GMT

© BBC MMVI

http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/42334000/jpg/_42334921_inside203.jpg

Looks like a pretty nice place to kick back and sip fermented horse urine.

Dylan Leblanc
Dec 10, 2006, 2:37 PM
sounds interesting.

"It was a huge risk, and I took it intuitively," Mr Nazarbayev said.
"I put everything at stake, including my career and my name. I knew if I had failed it would be a fatal failure, but the success would also be the real success."
But enough success to compensate for the risk the fatal failure??

Dylan Leblanc
Dec 10, 2006, 2:39 PM
Astana
http://www.metametrics.com/images/astana1.jpg

BTinSF
Dec 10, 2006, 4:47 PM
no-one seemed to believe that he would be able to create a real city in the steppe.

But the Astana skyline still looks more surreal than real - with its marble palaces, shining skyscrapers, metal structures and abstract statues, all surrounded by vast, snow covered emptiness.

If you are dictator, having a place where you can be secure under your dome with your supporters surrounded by "snow-covered emptiness" and no troublesome people who might oppose you or even revolt against you sounds ideal to me.

By the way, that "marble palace":

http://www.metametrics.com/images/astana1.jpg

looks like a true masterwork of Stalinist Gothic. I hope if they ever do revolt, they don't damage it.

canucklehead2
Dec 10, 2006, 10:36 PM
Sounds alot like a project that was proposed for northern Alberta back in the late 70's. They proposed to build an entire new town under a dome as well.

zilfondel
Dec 11, 2006, 9:52 PM
If you are dictator


Kazakhstan is actually a Republic, although the president has authoritarian powers (according to CIA world factbook (https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/kz.html))

LSyd
Dec 11, 2006, 10:09 PM
Dome city. cool.

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M II A II R II K
Apr 17, 2008, 5:05 PM
Sounds interesting.