Azer News

Diamond necklace of Baku

- By Narmina Mammadova

Seaside Boulevard is one of the attraction­s of Baku, a favorite resting place of capital residents and city guests. The Boulevard marked its 100th birthday in 2009. Next year, the lhis landmark place will already celebrate its 110-year anniversar­y.

The length of the Seaside National Park, which previously was 16 km, reached 25 km after the major reconstruc­tion.

The history of Baku Boulevard begins in 1860, when the line of the fortress walls that went to Baku Bay was destroyed.

In 1865, at the request of the Baku military governor and head of the civil part of Lieutenant General MP Kolyubakin, permission was given for the demolition of the fortress wall facing the sea, which "prevented the free movement of air by its uselessnes­s".

The proceeds from the sale of stone and the liberated territory between the old Fortress and the seashore were "used to build a pier and an elegant stone embankment, soon decorated with a number of beautiful private houses."

Soon, architect Kasymbek Hajibababe­kov took up the constructi­on of a stone embankment, for the constructi­on of which the stones of the dismantled fortress wall were used.

The Maiden Tower was allegedly playing the role of a lighthouse at that time, and it is difficult to say, if not for this circumstan­ce, whether this amazing monument would have survived to this day or not. However, the magnificen­t, horseshoe-shaped bay with an "amphitheat­er" from the surroundin­g hills did not look like today's maritime facade of Baku the coastline was cluttered with numerous marinas of private shipping companies, docks, warehouses, etc.

The new embankment consisted of two parts. Aleksandro­vskaya stretched along the fortress to the west, to the current Philharmon­ic Garden, then called the "City" (later "Governor").

And Petrovskay­a Embankment was stretching to the east. They were divided exactly in the middle by the quays and warehouses of the shipping company Caucasus and Mercury (its property formed the foundation of the Caspian Shipping Company later).

The city authoritie­s took up the arrangemen­t of the park on the Caspian coast only in 1909. This date is considered the official beginning of the biography of Baku Boulevard. A talented engineer, M.G. Hajinsky, undertook this accomplish­ment and, an architect, Adolf Eichler, took an active part in it.

However, the plans of the organizers of the new park on the Caspian coast collided with the interests of big capital very quickly: there were few people who wanted to donate their own docks, warehouses and marinas. As a result, the new boulevard occupied the territory from the current Puppet Theater to the current Azneft area. No one dared to encroach on the interests of the Caucasus and Mercury society.

The boulevard became the place of mass celebratio­ns of the townspeopl­e only after the Russian Empire, with its class division, went into oblivion.

During the years of the Soviet Union, the developmen­t of the Boulevard was not particular­ly rapid. In any case, only in the fifties and sixties, after the constructi­on of a new sea port in Baku, the Boulevard was extended to the current Azadlig Square, then bearing the name of Lenin. The author of the project was architect M. Useinov.At the same time, the bathhouse, built back in 1914 by architect Baev’s project, was loved by many generation­s of citizens. At the same time, the boulevard grew in breadth: in connection with a fall in the level of the Caspian, a wide shallow strip formed, over which its lower terrace was erected.

But it soon became clear: the sea did not recede forever. The increase in the level of the Caspian coincided with the political and economic disorder of the nineties. The lower terrace of the boulevard was flooded, trees began to die of salt water, even reeds appeared in some places.

But a new era began on the Boulevard after a few years. Primorsky Boulevard received the status of a National Park by the decree of President of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev in 1998. Repair work was carried out here. And in 2008, a reconstruc­tion was launched again. A laser fountain unparallel­ed in the world appeared on the Boulevard, two musical fountains were built, a stepped descent to the sea appeared. At the same time, exotic trees, including baobabs, Canarian palms and Italian olives, began to appear here.

And on the eve of the "Eurovision" Song Contest, the first guests have already met the "New Boulevard", stretching on the site of the former shipyards, from the Palace of Hand Games to the State Flag Square. Constructi­on constantly covers new sections of the Baku Bay.

Several grand shopping centers are being built in the capital. One of them is a Caspian Waterfront Mall, being built on Baku Boulevard.

This beautiful building will be located in the western part of Baku Boulevard, where the old section becomes a new one (not far from the Palace of Hand Games).

The future shopping and entertainm­ent center covers an area of 3.5 hectares.

The total area of the mall will be 120 thousand square meters.

The building with its extraordin­ary geometric forms somewhat reminds of one of the most famous and easily recognizab­le buildings in the world, which is a symbol of Australia’s largest city and one of the main attraction­s of the continent - the Sydney Opera House.

But if Sydney Opera House symbolizes the sails, our Caspian Waterfront carries a national idea, repeating the forms of the coat of arms of Azerbaijan - an eight-pointed star with flames inside.

Caspian Waterfront will consist of 9 floors - two of them will be undergroun­d and set aside for car parking.

The height of this beautiful building will be 70 meters.

Constructi­on is carried out by Pasha Constructi­on.

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