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Visa pour l'image 2012 : Gerd Ludwig

Looking down Nurzhol Blvd. from the Ak Orda Presidential Palace, the scene appears reminiscent of Tomorrowland. Built according to President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s vision, the city has taken on an ultramodern 21st century feel, enlisting the hands of a number of world-renowned architects and artists in the process. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

Young men flex their muscles before appreciative members of the opposite sex on a manmade beach along the banks of the Esil (Ishim) River. The river bisects Astana and serves as a source of recreation potential during the short summer months. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

The gilded imprint of President Nazarbayev's right hand is held high above Astana, within the golden orb observation platform of Baiterek. Baiterek is the quintessential symbol of Astana, itself alluding to a Kazakh folktale of the mythic bird Samruk and its golden egg, laid high in a poplar tree. It also serves as a major tourist attraction for foreign tourists and Kazaks alike. As visitors place their hands in the gilded handprint, the national anthem sounds and a nearby plaque suggests to make a wish. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

Baiterek is part modern vision, part Kazakh myth, serving not only as a symbol of Astana, but a tourist attraction for Kazakh and foreign visitors alike. Baiterek’s golden orb viewing platform features the gilded right hand print of Nursultan Nazarbayev, the first President of the Independent Republic of Kazakhstan. An accompanying plaque asks visitors to place their own hand in the imprint and make a wish, triggering a recording of the Kazakh national anthem, said to be written by the president. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

The large “American” homes and lawns of the Diplomatic Quarter stand juxtaposed with Astana’s modern high rises and architectural wonders. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

The stained glass artwork of renowned artist Brain Clark encapsulates the Assembly Room of the Palace of Peace and Reconciliation. The round table is meant for the leaders of the world’s religions to meet on an even ground. The doves—a universal symbol of peace—embody the Palace’s message of renunciation of violence and peace and stand as a reminder for those who Assemble beneath it. The room itself is located at the apex of 62m high pyramid structure designed by famed architect, Sir Norman Foster. The building is conceived as a global center for religious understanding, the renunciation of violence and the promotion of faith and human equality. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

Pedestrian Bridge connecting the Left and Right Banks, near the Beach and Central Park © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

Few sections of Astana show the contrast between the new apartment buildings and the old, small single-dwellings that used to dominate the city during the Soviet Era. Nurbek, standing foreground and to the right, lives in the older part of town, but shapes New Astana as a construction worker. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

Flanked by traditional Kazakh dancers, a bride awaits her formal unveiling at an opulent wedding palace, where she has just been married in a ceremony capped by the release of two white doves. The revelry begins when the veil is lifted. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

Due to its frigid climate, with only half the year above freezing (Astana is the second coldest capital of the world), indoor spaces provide an invaluable luxury. Here, in the Keruyen Shopping center, an arcade provides organized entertainment for children and teens, along with much needed relief from the cold. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

The beach built atop the Khan Shatyr attracts young people for an Ibiza themed party. Dressed in bathing suites, the party mimics nightlife a world away. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine

A traditionally dressed Kazakh group of visitors from the city of Taraz (formerly Dzhambyl) hurry across a wide avenue towards the alabaster white pillar known as the Kazakh peoples’ monument, topped with the golden image of the mythological bird Samruk. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine
Looking down Nurzhol Blvd. from the Ak Orda Presidential Palace, the scene appears reminiscent of Tomorrowland. Built according to President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s vision, the city has taken on an ultramodern 21st century feel, enlisting the hands of a number of world-renowned architects and artists in the process. © Gerd Ludwig/INSTITUTE for National Geographic Magazine
In northern Kazakhstan, a futuristic city has risen from the forsaken landscape and post-Soviet rubble. In 1997 President Nazarbayev had declared that the country’s capital would no longer be located in Almaty, Kazakhstan’s largest city, but move to a small town previously known as Akmola, Tselinograd, and Akmolinsk. Built with zealous political ambition and oil money, and renamed Astana, it is Kazakhstan’s new capital city.
Soviet-era buildings were demolished and replaced by soaring pinnacles of commerce, entertainment, and culture, designed by international star-architects like Lord Norman Foster and Kisho Kurokawa. Perhaps most notably is the Baiterek, the monumental symbol of Astana. Representing a poplar tree, it is emblematic of Kazakhstan’s self-image: constructed of steel, concrete, and glass, it holds court in the middle of a majestic central avenue lined with futuristic buildings. The Palace of Peace and Reconciliation is a pyramid that spans 62 meters. A 400-million-dollar mall resembles a nomadic tent, and the President’s Palace looks like Washington’s White House.
In a stunning contradiction of worlds, today’s Astana looks like a Manhattan-in-the-Steppe. As exotic as Dubai, it is lit at night like Disneyland, but in part displays the vast emptiness of North Korea’s capital city, Pyongyang. “The results are eclectic, visually arresting, and not to everyone’s taste. But love it or hate it, Astana is brash and grandiose — and wildly attractive to young strivers seeking success,” says writer John Lancaster.
Pulsing with superlative engineering, global cash and a futuristic architecture, Astana represents the country’s dream of a limitless future. The photographs explore the architecture and the daily life in the sparkling Kazakh capital where population swelled from 250,000 to more than 700,000 in a decade.
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