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Expert: Pile Of Built-Up In Center Of Contemporary Yerevan Unaccepta

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  • Expert: Pile Of Built-Up In Center Of Contemporary Yerevan Unaccepta

    EXPERT: PILE OF BUILT-UP IN CENTER OF CONTEMPORARY YEREVAN UNACCEPTABLE

    /ARKA/
    July 27, 2010
    YEREVAN

    YEREVAN, July 27. /ARKA/. Today's Yerevan is heaped with plenty of
    buildings, which is totally unacceptable, the chairman of the Union
    of Architects of Armenia Mkrtich Minasyan said.

    "To date, built-up pile in the center of Yerevan has reached
    the highest degree. This is unacceptable. There are streets where
    installation problems have not even been solved. There are schools,
    next to which at a distance of two meters, houses are being built,
    dimming the sunlight in the classrooms," said Minasyan on Tuesday at a
    news conference, citing as an example the school named after Charents.

    The head of the Union of Architects said that in the event of such
    irresponsible construction, the Armenians could lose the "old"
    recognizable Yerevan, its face.

    Minasyan believes that the new structure does not fit into the first
    master plan created by architect Alexander Tamanyan, and violates the
    architecture of old Yerevan. In particular he mentioned the reduction
    of green areas at the expense of the buildings in the form of houses
    and cafes.

    As an example, the architect brought one of the areas of the capital,
    the Zangoo ravine, which is piled up with various buildings. Another
    example includes the park between the streets of Saryan and Mashtots,
    on the territory of which it was tried to build a 7-storey building and
    that is totally unacceptable in terms of seismic safety of the capital.

    In his turn, the great grandson of the famous architect, director of
    the House-Museum named after Alexander Tamanyan, Hayk Tamanyan noted
    that the main axis of the master plan of his great grandfather was
    the tendency to Mount Ararat, which was broken back in the 50th for
    ideological reasons.

    Tamanyan added that to date the core of the city still exists, but
    an increase in buildings with a high attic, reducing the green areas
    and the failure to follow the number of floors in the buildings (on
    the general plan Tamanyan of 1924, the maximum number of floors of
    buildings was up to three) will lead to a loss of architecture of
    the capital.

    Master plan of Yerevan has been approved by the Government of Armenia
    in 2005, and its implementation is designed to 2020.




    From: A. Papazian
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