Map of Kazakhstan - Atameken
It seems impossible to travel around any country in 1 hour. Kazakhstan, which is the 9th largest in the world, seems even more so. But there is one possibility to do it – you can turn into Gulliver for a while and see the entire country right before your eyes. Just visit the ethno-memorial complex the “Map of Kazakhstan – Atameken”, designed by renowned architects and designers.
The park was opened on Sept. 8, 2001 by the initiative of President Nazarbayev. Such a fun way of presenting histories of cities, countries and peoples is popular in many countries: Austria, Belgium, Britain, Germany, Switzerland and others. Around the world there are 17 of similar complexes.
The area of 1,7 hectares, which is about two soccer fields, comprises the cotton and rice fields of the Kyzyl-Kum, the gray Burabai, ancient temples, the Pyramid of the World, the rushing rivers of Alatau, Karaganda’s coal and oil of the Caspian Sea. There you’ll see the country's 14 provinces and 2 major cities - Astana and Almaty. The nature and landscapes, architecture, and transport networks of the country can be clearly seen there too. The number of exhibits on the complex has already exceeded 200 and continues to increase steadily.
The heart of the park is an open forum with the arena for celebrations, meetings and other events. In addition, there are a lot of craft shops where you can buy souvenirs produced by masters of applied arts as well as souvenirs from different regions of Kazakhstan.
This complex is yet another shining symbol of the country illustrating the diversity of this vast country. But there is only one question: is there the model of the park itself?
Ex. 2. Visit the ethno-memorial complex «Map of Kazakhstan» and write an essay.
Ex. 3. Numbers practice for architects
Choose one of the numbers below and turn it into a question. Your partner should guess
The answer and then you should give them hints until they get it exactly right.
Useful language
No. It’s much much/ much (= a lot)/ quite a lot/ a bit (= a little)/ a tiny bit…
… bigger/ smaller/ higher/ lower/ longer/ more/ less/ earlier/ later (than that)
1. The average salary in Florida for an architect in nineteen ninety nine was fifty five
thousand and ten dollars.
2. The average salary in Florida for a surveyor in nineteen ninety nine was thirty six thousand five hundred and fifty dollars.
3. The average salary in Florida for civil engineers in nineteen ninety nine was fifty three
thousand nine hundred and forty dollars.
4. Forty two percent of graduates from US architecture schools in two thousand and ten
were women
5. Six percent of graduates from US architecture schools in nineteen seventy were women
6. Twenty four percent of the working architects in the US in two thousand and ten were
women
7. Ancient Roman tenement houses had three storeys.
8. The heaviest stones in Stonehenge weigh forty five tonnes.
9. It took a hundred and thirty years to complete the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Amiens.
10. There are two and a half million rivets in the Eiffel Tower.
11. The smallest church in the world (near Covington, Kentucky, U.S.A) can only accommodate three people.
12. The Empire State Building has over ten million bricks.
13. There is a thirty-nine-storey cemetery in Sao Paulo.
14. Twenty five percent of the ten thousand three hundred glass panels in Boston's Hancock Tower fell to the ground between nineteen seventy one and nineteen seventy
three.
15. The Empire State Building took one year and forty five days to build.
16. There are a hundred and two floors in the Empire State Building.
17. The Empire State Building has six thousand five hundred windows
18. It took seven million man-hours to construct the Empire State Building.
19. It took fifty seven thousand tons of steel to construct the frame of the Empire State
Building.
20. Five people died while building the Empire State Building
21. The most expensive house in the world (Villa La Leopolda in Nice, France, the home
of Bill Gates and now Roman Abramovich) is worth three hundred and ninety eight million three hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
22. The Eiffel Tower is repainted every seven years with fifty tons of dark brown paint.
23. The first skyscraper (The Home Insurance Building in Chicago) was built in eighteen
eight five. It had ten storeys.
24. The Empire State Building is struck by lightning about a hundred times a year.
25. The Library Tower in Los Angeles is designed to withstand an earthquake of eight point
three on the Richter scale.
Ex. 4.Architecture rotating revision board game Everyone put a counter each on the Start square. To move, students must make correct sentences that match the instructions in the box they are on, stopping counting the first time they make a mistake. For example, if they say three things that their partner agrees with about this building and then their partner disagrees with their fourth statement they can move three squares clockwise and their next task will be to name 3D shapes.
The first person to get all the way round the board and the person who is leading when the teacher stops the game is the winner.
Words to describe lines | Rooms | External features of buildings | Changes in Tokyo during your lifetime | START Sentences describing this building that your partners agree with |
Janglish connected to architecture and its British or American versions | Sentences describing Chiba that your partners agree with | |||
Architecture words which have different meanings in Japanese and English | Sentences about British homes that your partners agree with | |||
2D shapes | 3D shapes | |||
Dimensions | Types of house | |||
Storage in a house | Types of roof | |||
Words connected to floors | True sentences about where your partner is living | |||
Words connected to going up and down in buildings | Cities your partner wouldn’t like to live in | |||
Different kinds of lighting | Cities your partner would like to live in | |||
Building materials | Important factors when choosing a city that your partner agrees with | |||
Kinds of accommodation | Negative things about Tokyo that your partner agrees with | |||
Negative adjectives to describe cities | Positive adjectives to describe cities | Cities your partner wouldn’t like to visit | Cities your partner would like to visit | Positive things about Tokyo that your partner agrees with |
Grammar: Non-finite form of the verb: Gerundial Construction
There are some cases when the Gerund is related to its own “subject”, expressed by a noun or pronoun: We appreciate your helping us/ We enjoyed the band’s playing very much.
A gerundial construction is nearly always rendered in Russian by a clause, generally introduced by “то, что” / ”тем,что “/ “как “.
The nominal element of the construction can be expressed in different ways:
If it denotes a living being it may be expressed by a possessive pronoun or a noun in the possessive case: Do you mind mysmoking?
When the nominal element consists of two or more noun, possessive case is not used: I object to Mary and Jane going out on such a windy day.
If the nominal element denotes a lifeless thing it is expressed by a noun in the common case: I said something about my clock being slow.