A photographic exploration of the Soviet monotowns − urban settlements erected around single industries in the hinterlands of the former USSR −; some thriving, others struggling to survive, still others partially abandoned.
Through nine chapters with over 130 photographs taken by Russian photographer Alexander Veryovkin,Monotownsby Zupagrafika captures the post-industrial landscapes and Soviet-era architecture of themonogorodsextending from the Arctic Circle to the Russian Far East, such asVorkuta, Norilsk, Mirny, Kirovsk, Tolyatti, Cherepovets, Magnitogorsk, MonchegorskandNikel, and the daily lives of their inhabitants.
Includes informative texts providing a valuable insight into the urban development of the featured cities and a foreword by the architectural critic Konstantin Budarin.
‘The Soviet economy was organized according to five-year plans, with the whole country operating like an enormous corporation. Monotowns were like different departments within this corporation.’
– Excerpt from the foreword
– Background info Monotownsis a follow-up toConcrete SiberiaandEastern Blocks,created by Zupagrafika. This time, David Navarro and Martyna Sobecka, the creators and curators of Monotowns, selected a number of cities and locations and invited Russian photographer Alexander Veryovkin to capture them. The featured photographs were taken over a two-year period during winter, with temperatures reaching as low as -35° Celsius in some places.
Eastern Blocks Concrete Landscapes of the Former Eastern Bloc ‘Sleeping districts’ of Moscow, Plattenbauten of East Berlin, modernist estates of Warsaw, Kyiv`s Brezhnevki: although these...
This second volume of Zupagrafika’s Eastern Blocks expands the photographic survey of concrete suburbs across the former Eastern Bloc. Stretching from Ukraine...