Monument to the Battle of Bash-Aparan, Armenia
Photographer: Stefano Perego
Misplaced Lens Cap

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@communistarchitecture
Monument to the Battle of Bash-Aparan, Armenia
Photographer: Stefano Perego
A selection of WWII and concentration camp memorials, commissioned by former Yugoslavian president, Josip Broz Tito. All photos by Jan Kempenaers.
Acadamy of Dramatic Art. Grodno, Belarus
Footage acquired by Kinolibrary
Residential building in Karaburma, Belgrade, 1963 - photo by Rista Sekerinski
Residential building on Minskaya Street, Bobruisk, Belarus (1980s) © Belorussian State Archive of Scientific-Technical Documentation VS Kisho Kurokawa, Nakagin Kapuseru Tawā, Tokyo, 1970-1972
Andropov's Ears, Tbilisi, Georgia (now demolished)
Uzbekistan History Museum, Tashkent
"The Uzbekistan History Museum, former Lenin Museum in Tashkent, built in 1970 is a good example of how multiculturalism affected Soviet architecture. The Soviet Central Asian Republics became the true laboratory of local form, materials, and ornaments.
Concrete decorative grilles used here are based on traditional Uzbek sunscreen called Panzhara. It is a rare example in Soviet architecture influenced by local culture."
Text source
Russian Embassy, Havana
MoGES, Moscow
Gosplan Garage, Moscow
Burevestnik Factory Workers Club, Moscow (Photograph by Richard Pare)
Sports Hall in Pristina, Kosovo (1977)
Thank you to http://tengoku-to-jigoku.tumblr.com/ for the location and date
The Wedding Palace, Tbilisi, Georgia
Prague Congress Centre, Czech Republic
Prague, Czech Republic
My apologies for the lack of posts in the last few months, I was really busy with exam work and then went away for a month around Europe, so hopefully this will swiftly get back on track.
I am also looking for someone with an equal interest in Soviet culture and architecture to help me run this blog, so please send me a message if you are interested.