New Horizons; A
space-age city jutting out of the vast plains of central Asia – welcome to
Kazakhstan’s new capital, Astana. Words by Christopher
Robbins, executive summary by darmansjah
‘The variety of
architecture is a dizzying mix of clashing shapes and colours, yet is oddly
suited to a nation made up of 100 ethnic groups’
‘I HATE this
city, I hate this city, I hate this city!’ For the first six months after moving
to Astana – Kazakhtan’s spanking new capital built by presidential
decree in the middle of the country’s vast empty steppe – Akmaral Aidarbekova
complained bitterly about the place on a daily basis. The pavements were unfinished,
forcing pedestrians to wade through deep puddles of melting snow, and there was
nowhere to go and nothing to do. The weather was extreme too, with bitterly
cold winters that dropped to -40®C
baking hot summers that soared to over 40®C.
A young, single woman in her mid-twenties working as a lawyer in
the Ministry of Finance, Akmaral had been obliged to relocate north from the
old capital Almaty, like thousands
of other government employees. ‘I was not happy to come here,’ she says. ‘I
arrive on Valentine’s Day in 2000 and it was so windy, I was nearly knocked
over. And it was so cold. February is the month of the Buran – snow blizzards
which last for two or three days. I was worried that the whole winter was going
to be the same.’
The decision to make Astana the capital was taken in July 1994,
and the move began three years later. As Peter the Great built St Petersburg on
a swamp and Philip II of Spain turned a dusty village into Madrid, so Nursultan
Nazarbayev, the president of Kazakhtan, decreed that a rundown steppe town bang
in the middle of nowhere should be transformed into the nation’s capital. The
city chosen for the world’s greatest architectural makeover had previously been
in long decline, inhabited largely by a Russian population of impoverished
agricultural workers. Its concrete tower blocks were crumbling, the peasant
housing like slums, and the infrastructure chronically rundown. Not to put too
fine a point on it, the place was an absolute dump.
Suddenly, tens of thousands of government employees had to move
north as various ministries transferred sections of their operation to the city
over a period of two years. No capital
has ever been relocated in such a short time. The president explained the
rationale by saying the Almaty had grown
from a manageable population of 400,000 to 1.5 million, and had simply run out
of space to expand. The city’s mountains, while providing a beautiful backdrop
to the old capital, helped to trap pollution. On top of this, Almaty was prone
to earthquakes. Geographically, the old capital was in the extreme southeast
corner of the country, near the border with China,
and cut off from the rest of the republic. The rich oil fields of the Caspian
Sea lay over 1,800 miles to the west, while there were unstable neighbours less
than a couple of miles to the south. Astana, on the other hand, was perfectly
placed in the very centre of the country.
But even the president, when planting a tree in the early days of
the city, conceded: ‘It is windy up here, isn’t it? It certainly is windy.’
Later, he would try to put a patriotic spin on the new capital’s harsh climate:
‘This is normal weather for this place. It is the weather of our native land
and of our forefathers.’
‘It took me about three years to change my mind about Astana as
the city changed around me,’ says Akmaral. She married and moved into a modern
apartment. ‘Now it feels like real city, with cafes and restaurant and parks,
with lots of things to do,’ she says. ‘I don't even mind the winter now – it’s
cold but also dry, and there are beautiful sunny days. the winter now – it’s
cold but also dry, and there are beautiful sunny days.’
‘I didn’t mind coming here,’ says Akmaral’s husband Maghzhan –
known to his Western friends as Mac. ‘I left very good about being at the
beginning of something, involved in building a new capital for my young
country. It felt like being part of the future rather than the past.’
Astana’s architectural style can best be described as
idiosyncratic. The variety is a dizzying mix of clashing shapes and colours,
yet is oddly suited to a nation made up of 100 ethnic groups following at least
30 different religions. The oriental post-modernism takes some getting used to,
although the locals have domesticated all the thrusting modernity by giving
many of the buildings homely nicknames according to their shape: a canary –
yellow skyscraper is known as the Banana Building; seven squat cylindrical
constructions are called the Seven Beer Barrels; and a pair of circular towers
are the Ice Cream Cones. The Cigarette Lighter was so-called before it suffered an alarming fire. Inevitably, such
as an ambitious building project has had its failures: one building is known a
the Titanic after a huge crack appeared in its foundations; another, threatened
by a crumbling riverbank, has been dubbed the Kursk after the ill-fated
Russians submarine.
The ministry of Finance building gives the impression of a dollar
sign, while the sweeping curves of the new stadium look, well, sporty. The
National Archives are housed in a grey-green egg, the circus in a flying
saucer, and there are now massive, California-style shopping malls, 24-hours
supermarkets and numerous cafes and restaurants. but so far, no McDonald’s or
Starbucks. ‘We’ll survive,’ says Mac.
New religious buildings stand among government ministries and
banks – a spectacular mosque donated by Qatar; a big blue synagogue paid for a
Jewish Kazakh aluminium billionaire; and a large Russian Orthodox
cathedral built by public subscription. The miracle is that everything has been
built in little over a decade.
In the centre of the city stands Baiterek Tower, a tall,
spiky construction that cradles a glass and alumunium ball at its top. It’s the
symbol of Astana an independent Kazakhstan, people take its lift up 97 symbolic
metres – 1997 being the date of the move the capital – to the dome for a clear view over city and
steppe in every direction. Once at the top, it’s customary to approach the
green malachite plinth that sits in its centre, upon which rests a disc made
from five kilograms of solid silver bearing an imprint of the president’s hand
crafted from two kilograms of solid gold. Visitors then place their own hand in
the president’ palm before making a wish.
On my visit I am led to the plinth by a guide and dutifully
place my hand in that of the president – and almost jump out of my skin. Before
I can wish, an as I make contact with the presidential palm, the tower is
filled with a roaring choir backed by a mighty orchestra belting out the
national anthem at full patriotic throttle.
There is a panoramic view of the city from the tower and, in
the distance, the vast wedding cakes of domes and pillars of the Presidential
Palace. The Palace is a place of work and not a residence, designed to impress
with its ostentation and size. Its interior, hung with crystal chandeliers the
size of small buildings, has the proportions of a city square. Small armies
parade there in winter when ceremonial occasions cannot be held outside.
Beyond the palace, a gigantic pyramid – the Pyramid of Peace
– can be seen. Sixty metres high, it was designed by British architect Lord
Foster and contain a 1,500-seat opera house. Another unique cration of Foster’s
is the giant, futuristic yurt known as Khan Shatyr – the khan’s Tent – which
contains palm trees, beaches and even an artificial sea, allowing people to
enjoy tropical conditions inside while blizzards rage outdoors.
I’d not visited Astan for four years and, having returned, I
find the change simply astounding. The last time I was in the city I found it
impressive but without soul. Now everything has changed. Astana has developed a
personality. Not only has the skyline altered beyond recognition, but the place
is alive. There is a buzz about it, an energy reflecting its youthful
population. Astana has become human.
The average age in the city is 34, and young women from all
over Kazakhstan flock here looking for husbands because of the army of single
men working in its numerous ministries. Construction continues apace, and there
are so many new cultural centres, museums and stadia – football, bicycle and
ice-skating – popping up, that even the official guides can sometimes become
confused: ‘I’m sorry – this is the National Museum and you wanted to see the
President’s Museum. Perhaps you would also like to see the Palace of
Independence?’
‘Not
only has the skyline altered beyond recognition, but Astana is alive. There is
a buzz about it, an energy reflecting its youthful population’
ONE of the more
immutable disadvantages of Astana is that it is a long way from anywhere. It’s
like living on a remote island – there is a reason the steppe is referred to as
a sea of grass. In a country the size of Western Europe, distances are
enormous. People in the city resign themselves to three-hours drives to reach
the closet resort areas.
Some 106 miles to the southeast is a network of salt lakes
that are home in spring and summer to vast flocks of pink flamingos. Kogalzhyn State Nature Reserve, covering
915 square miles, is a bird-watcher’s
dream and candidates as a Unesco World Heritage Site. But the most popular
weekend location for Astana residents wishing to escape their city is Burabay National Park, an area of lakes, hills and forest is often billed as ‘the pearl of Kazakhstan’ or even
‘Kazakhstan’s Switzerland’. Only steppe dwellers would consider its low granite
hills to be Alpine; despite its undoubted beauty, it more resembles Finland’s
lakes and forest.
Mac and I set off on a Saturday morning for an overnight
stay. As we leave the city limits, we drive through a wide girdle of forest,
planted as a green belt designed to be both a lung and a windbreak. Stunted by
wind, frozen earth and long winters, the forest has grown considerably slower than
Astana itself. Beyond the green belt there is only the empty steppe.
‘Up here on the steppe you see natural phenomena you don’t
see anywhere else,’ says Mac. ‘I’ve seen a rainbow at a temperature of-35®C,
which was absolutely beautiful. And it’s big sky country, too – so you can see
black clouds in one part of the sky and brilliant sunshine in another.’
We buy beer and delicious smoked fish in a shop on the way
to park, then drive to a comfortable hotel that retains elements of a Soviet
sanatorium – a course of leeches is on offer. It’s the end of the season and
almost no –one is around the lakes or forests, except for old ladies searching
for mushrooms. Coloured ribbons have been tied in profusion to trees in certain
‘sacred’ groves – shamanistic rather than religious – by wedding parties.
There are a number of lakes in the national park, but
Burabay is the most beautiful. Surrounded by birch forest, its waters lap a
strip of sandy shore. There are various inlets where visitors can rent a rowing
boat or hire an oarsman to take them to the mysterious rock known as Zhumbaktas
stone. A legend surrounds it, and it is said to resemble a beautiful woman from
one angle and an old hag from another. I can’t see it myself. But then neither
can I make out the elephant, warrior and shoe that other outcrops are said to
resemble. Zhumbaktas stone is covered in graffiti, dating back to 1905. My
favourite is from 1949 and signed: ‘Nadia: Thank God for those husbands who
send their wives alone for a vacation.’
AS we enter Astana
on the frive back from Burabay, Marc remarks on all the young families out for
an afternoon stroll. In the winter they go skating on the river and drill holes
in the ice for fishing, while elaborate ice sculptures decorates the streets.
‘When I first came here, I barely saw any prams on the streets,’ he says. ‘In a
year, I started to see prams. And after two years, the whole embankment along
the river was full of prams.’
And two of them belonged to Mac and his wife Akmaral, who
now have a couple of you sons. Back in the city, Akmaral cooks dinner for us
while the boys wander in and out of the kitchen. It’s a settled, happy domestic
scene.
‘This is a young city built for young families, for a
younger generation,’ says Akmaral. ‘It’s a city designed for family life, which
is very important for Kazakhs. All the colleagues I came here with have now
married and had children – they have become adults and personalities in this
city. Astana has become their home. And it has become my home.’
The old complaints have been resolved. Akmaral no longer
yearn to return to Almaty, and has no desire to move. ‘I have changed
completely, one hundred per cent – I am very happy here,’ she says.
Like its young population, Astana has finally come of age.
Astana may just mean ‘capital’ in Kazakh, but there’s
nothing banal about a city where the myths of nomadic past inspire 21st-century
monuments.
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