Peoples' Friendship Palace
Initial plans for the new palace were developed already in 1971. The interior of the building was decorated with ceiling lights, chandeliers, large plaster panels and with three monumental florentine mosaics, named "Peoples' Friendship", "Holiday" and "Land of Flowers", on the banquet hall walls. The building's façade and decorations draw inspiration from national ornamental patterns, reminiscent of muqarnas elements found in local architecture. Local marble, as well as Nurota and G'ozg'on marbles, were used in the construction. Today, the palace is used for various events such as congresses, conferences, festivals, and concerts. Official ceremonies for foreign state representatives are also held in the concert hall. The treaty leading to the establishment of the post-Soviet regional Collective Security Treaty Organization was signed at the palace in 1992 while in 2004 the palace hosted the summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation.
In April of 2008 the body known as the Republican Commission on the Standardization of Toponyms issued the decision No. 07-5-16 after which the palace was renamed to the "Palace of Arts Istiklol". The decision was nevertheless reversed in when on 26 April 2018 President of Uzbekistan Shavkat Mirziyoyev suggested reintroduction of the previous name followed by the formal decision by the Tashkent City Council of People's Deputies on May 3, 2018.
References
- ^ Tom Ravenscroft (8 November 2023). "Ten key examples of Tashkent's Soviet modernist architecture". Dezeen. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
- ^ Jože Plečnik (n.d.). "Peoples Friendship Palace". Architectuul. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
- ^ Sultanova, M.F (2023). "The Significance of the Stylistic Solution of Tashkent Cultural and Educational Theater Buildings in Modern Design". Pioneer: Journal of Advanced Research and Scientific Progress. 2 (3): 83-85.
- ^ Farzana Shakoor; Mutahir Ahmed (1992). "Pakistan's Foreign Policy: Quarterly Survey: July to September 1992". Pakistan Horizon. 45 (4): 1-5.