Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Palace
Linnahall
de Armando Jongejan
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Linnahall
This huge complex of concrete in Tallinn, Estonia looks like a bunker for submarines but was designed by Estonian architects Raine Karp and Riina Altmäe as the Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Palace of Culture and Sport. The complex was later renamed as Linnahall, which means city hall. But it is not a city hall at all.
The complex was built as a concert and sports venue in 1980 as a 5000-seat amphitheatre and a 3000-seat ice hall on the occasion of the 22nd Moscow Summer Olympic Games in 1980. At that time Tallinn was the capital of the Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic and the sailing events took place here. The monumental building is situated as part of the harbour, just outside the medieval Old Town. It looks like a fortress but access is also an element of the structure. It is a strange combination.
The building was completed in 1980 and in the 1980s the project won several international architectural awards. The quality of the construction is poor and it makes a dilapidated impression. The last public event was in April 2009 and since then it is closed to the public. It is now an enormous ‘modern’ ruin.
Nowadays the construction with its lines of symmetry appears strange in Tallinn and is used by young couples and graffiti artists. Regardless, in a certain way it is still attractive.
Sources:
architectuul.com, spottedbylocals.com, academia.edu and Wikipedia
Características y detalles
- Categoría principal: Fotografía artística
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Características: Cuadrado pequeño, 18×18 cm
N.º de páginas: 50 - Fecha de publicación: nov. 01, 2015
- Idioma English
- Palabras clave Vladimir Ilyich Lenin Palace, linnahall, tallinn, lenin, estonia
Acerca del creador
Armando Jongejan (1960, Egmond aan Zee - The Netherlands) studied photography at the University of Applied Photography in Apeldoorn and he works as a freelance photographer. His photographic interest is landscape and documentary/contemporary photography. He want to o create a coherent body of work rather than a single photo. Since 1989 Armando Jongejan have had several exhibitions in galleries and (photo)museums, fe: Hasselblad Image centre (1997) in Utrecht, OFF Photo Festival Naarden 2001, 2005 (group) and 2011 and 2019 (solo), Museum of Photography Amsterdam (FOAM) (2005), Dutch Museum of Photography, Rotterdam (2008 and 2018), the Photography Museum of China in Lishui (2010), Photo Gallery Fenton House in Bath - England (2012) and also in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, England, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy and Spain. Photos are published in magazines and books. Since 1996 Armando has published seven photo books and several Blurb books.