Soft Power in Moscow

The Landscape Architecture Magazine calls Zaryadye Park an entertaining landscape intended as a spectacular place, a special attraction, and a free public space—a term that Russian architects agree had almost no precedent in the language before a series of convergences brought the park into being. Anna Kamyshan, a Ukrainian architect at the office of Project Meganom, told LAM: “It’s not really a simple thing to do in post-Soviet country because before this park, public space was not even a word.” Read More at Landscape Architecture Magazine