Central Almaty

The central area of Almaty is the city’s historic centre, a monument to Tsarist and Soviet town planning and seemingly unaffected by the massive development which is taking place to the south of the city. Established on a grid system, central Almaty is easy to navigate and a great place to walk thanks to the wide avenues, tree-lined streets and roadside parks, complete with fountains and statues.  As you walk you will notice, and occasionally have to negotiate, wide gutters or aryks, which divert water from the city’s three main rivers for irrigation as well as acting as storm drains in wet weather.

The northern end of central Almaty is dominated by the blue-domed Central Mosque to the east, the bustling Green (Zelony) Bazaar in the centre – perhaps the most Central Asian experience in town and a great place to pop into for a bowl of green tea – and the Arbat or pedestrian street running west of the bazaar along Zhibek Zholy.  This name translates as Silk Road and is a destination for street artists, families and a good place to watch the mix of Almaty life.

To the southeast of the Arbat on Kunayev Street is the Arasan Banya, the central public bathhouse.  These magnificent baths are the perfect place to relax after a night of hedonism, or perhaps a good place to scrub up before going out.

Right opposite the baths you will find the rectangular Panfilov Park, at the centre of which is the city’s main cathedral – a remarkable piece of pastel-coloured wooden architecture from the Tsarist period, reputed to have been built without the use of a single nail.

Running south of the Park on the eastern side of the central area is Dostyk, formerly Lenin Avenue and Almaty’s main street, which climbs uphill towards the landmark tower of Hotel Kazakhstan. Walk just beyond the hotel to see the Palace of the Republic, a Soviet building now used mainly for concerts whose golden eaves have a definite feel of the Orient about them.

To the west of Hotel Kazakhstan, along Kurmangazy, you will find the Academy of Sciences – a huge neoclassical edifice with Islamic touches which was built in the 1950s in the grand Stalinist style, and designed by the famous Moscow architect, Alexey Shchusev.

From the Academy of Sciences, it is well worth strolling down any of the following small streets:  Valikhanov, Tulebaev or Baisetov – beautiful in summer or winter and devoid of the traffic of the larger streets which run from north to south.  As you walk you will notice plaques on the sides of buildings commemorating well-known figures – artists, writers, politicians and scientists – who lived there during Soviet times.

A walk down Baisetov Street (four streets to the west of the Academy of Sciences) will bring you to the Abai Opera and Ballet Theatre, another highly attractive neo-classical building which, on a good day, with the mountains in the background, is one of Almaty’s most iconic sights. If all this walking has exhausted you, pop into L’Affiche, the café facing the Opera House, another of Almaty’s gems.


Find a...