Basin of the Engineering Cooperative, Tulsk region, D. Fyodrovka
The pool was allegedly built in 1986. The idea of creating it came to the head of the wheel after visiting the town of Gagra, where he saw a beautiful building with a glass dome and wanted to build something like this in his own place. However, the basin was never used for its purpose: there was a design error during the construction, and all the water leaked out overnight.
The pool of an engineering cooperative was built in an era of restructuring for the Soviet-Cechoslovak friendship, the last 20 years of Soviet architecture — a period of bloom before the end of the era, the awakening of energy. The pool was the object of a dream and hope for the future, something space. The purpose of the project is to create a museum park dedicated to the Soviet architecture, which reflects the desire of people and architects for freedom and creativity. The park museum is divided into two parts: 1. An exhibition from Soviet architecture models under the dome. 2. All right, all right, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. Rethinking the Soviet architecture of former republics on street territory, creating interactive facilities.
The Territory ' s Genplane
The concept of the installation is to build a «city of the future» model, as represented by Soviet architects in the 1960s and 1990s. Building principle: Architectural objects from all the allied republics come together in a single composition, forming a large urban model of the «ideal city». Visitors are able to interact interactively with the installation elements.
Axonometry of the «City of the Future» installation
Plan 1 floor
The entrance zone to the building
View through the gap to the 1st floor installation
Plan 2 floor
Park axonometry
The concept of each pavilion is to rethink the already existing Soviet architecture by creating modern structures. The principle of building each pavilion: Each building of a particular republic takes a sign element and forms itself into an installation.
