Almaty City Centre

Almaty City Centre

Located at the doorstep of the Northern Tian Shan Mountains, Almaty used to be the country seat up until 1997, when the Soviet-friendly president Nursultan Nazarbayev moved the capital north to Astana to be in closer proximity to Russia. Formerly call Alma-Ata, meaning “full of apples”, the Almaty region is where the granddaddy of the current day apple originated. The wild apple ancestor, Malus sieversii, can still be found in the Tian Shan mountains.

Tian Shan Mountain ranges seen from the hotel.

With tree lined streets and avenues, Almaty is a quaint small sized metropolis of 2 million people.

Can easily be mistaken for Brooklyn in some areas
Or Mexico City in others.
But Almaty is far cleaner than either city.
With plenty of parks and green spaces scattered about.

It is a pedestrian haven with ample transportation options. A lot of the younger folks can be seen zipping around the city on public e-scooters. Besides buses on surface roads, there is the single line subway system that connects 11 stops along the 8-mile route. From start to finish, construction of this one line took 23 years (1988-2011). Cost of a ride is only 120 tenge, or 25¢.

Each station has a unique design.
This mosaic wall is located at the Auezov Theater station
And this at the Zhibek Zholy station
.
.

One of the major sites in the city is the Ascension Cathedral, a Russian Orthodox Church, in the Panfilov park near the Zhibek Zholy station.

Standing at 46 meters, this pretty pastel colored wooden church is the tallest wooden church in the world
In contrast, the interior is a burst of saturated reds and gold (no photos allowed inside).
Looks like something straight out of a fairy tale.
To the east of the church is the WWII memorial commemorating the soldiers of the Almaty infantry unit who died defending against the Nazis.
The eternal flame in the fore ground burns 24/7

A few blocks from the park is the large green market where locals can buy anything they need ranging from meats and produce to household goods.

The utilitarian exterior of the main market building
In the rear of the market are isles of meats separated by animal type. Here is the horse meat section.
Horse meat is a staple in Kazakh culture.
Pork can also be found in this predominantly Muslim country. The market is remarkably clean and odor free, with nary a fly in sight.

Unlike some markets in other countries, there were very few tourists strolling through. Most tourists in Almaty hail from Russia and China. Few Americans make it this far, as locals are surprised when they hear that we come from the US.

2 thoughts on “Almaty City Centre

  1. You may have heard of the World Health Organizations goal “health for all by the year 2000”?

    It was a lofty goal voted on in 1978, at the WHO General Assembly, held in (then) Alma-Ata. The idea was to have a global push for basic primary health care for _everyone on the planet_. Things were going quite well, until the oil crisis of the 1970s.
    I always wondered what happened to Alma-Ata, and it never occurred to me that the city’s name was changed.

    https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/142321/WPR_RC032_GlobalStrategy_1981_en.pdf;sequence=3

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to mochatruffalo Cancel reply