Big promenade on the Caspian Sea.
Parking lot with weakly disguised construction fence. Promoting the future park. Construction. Building up.
Approaches. To the Crystal Hall and a pier in the promenade.
Follow our adventures as we share our thoughts, impressions and awe at what could be called: Foreign Service's Wide World of Talalay.
Big promenade on the Caspian Sea.
Parking lot with weakly disguised construction fence. Promoting the future park. Construction. Building up.
Approaches. To the Crystal Hall and a pier in the promenade.
The plaques are elaborate, tripping into marble frieze, high relief, almost a full blown sculpture. This gentleman is identified as a famous statesman
Usually there are artistic hints at the person's occupation. Here's a Jewish writer, complete with fluttering papers. Mazel tov. Next, a "legendary singer." His voice was rays of bliss.
Big in biz. The oil rig in the background tells you he was a pioneer in the country's oil and gas development. Artist and composer, with requisite high collar and brooding expression. He's so creative!
Starting off big, the impressive grave, monument to the third president of Azerbaijan, Heydar Aliyev. The plot comes with its own gardener.
The graves are not some simple affair, no basic headstone with a generic, "With Love" etching. Here's a statue of a famous mathematician and some sort of doctor, scientist. Casual, confident poses and maybe a piece of your, err, equipment helps sell your significance.
You can take it with you! At least part of a piano and the keyboard from the movie Big. Found, a woman. Not an easy discovery among the endless guys. Her pose says, "Hmph, took you long enough."
Fancy fountain courtyard, the front entrance to the big pad.
Inside, the palace is more museum, less rich family period rooms. Really nice red rugs. Horsey things.
Cool octagonal sanctuary out-building.
Imposing. The big Maiden Tower, kind of a Welcome to the Old City landmark.
A typical street, pedestrian sized, cobblestones, wood balcony, quaint. Another landmark, the Juma mosque.
A little modern life in the old city, a giant mural. Birds and blossoms. A little ancient life, foundation remnants of a bathing complex.
Wall of fame. If someone paints your portrait, you hang it up. More paintings, more hangings.
Office, where the master wrote. And listened to music, maybe read, nibbled a sandwich, solved some sudoku. A case holding his hunting gear. And dombra instrument. Look, another portrait, appropriately placed near similar props.
Various identification cards for The Party. Hey, the country was a Union shop. Pink bedroom, perhaps letting the wife win the decorating battle.
Looking down the actual "lane" of the complex toward the big Shahidlar Monument. Plaques along the lane are reserved for fighters against the Soviet Army during the struggle for independence in 1990.
Another view of the rows of plaques and a look at other graves, many decorated with ribbons, flowers. Everyone remembers.
Flowers by Shahidlar Monument. The memorial is the focus of the cemetery and it houses an eternal flame. The British are here. Their memorial marks the death of 47 soldiers from the Commonwealth during WWI.
Let's start with a look up at the famous Flame Towers, the unofficial symbol of modern Baku. Is James Brown nearby? He used to front a group called the Famous Flames, for those peeps who somehow are not familiar with the Godfather of Soul. Shame on you.
The second most famous landmark, the Heydar Aliyev Centre. The curves just keep coming. Alas, those curves are not self cleaning and a crew on what looks like mini hockey rink smoothing Zamboni machines is busy doing a wet dusting.
It's not all building from scratch. There's an arts, entertainment district that contains some nice rehab work. The Stone Chronicle Museum is in an old power plant building. A nightclub and restaurant complex took over some former warehouses.
At the end of the day, commerce has to justify the statement, right? The city's major shopping mall on the water, Deniz Mall. Big billiard balls out front are promoting the lottery. Commerce contained, all fenced off. It turns out, the iconic Flame Towers are mostly empty and closed. A hotel is open and so is an investigation into the possibility that the project is built on unstable ground. Occupy at your own risk.
*Soon is relative, original opening date was sometime in 2015.