Здание музея АЗЛК, Museum building on Volgogradsky Prospect, Moscow, Russia
The AZLK Museum Building was a circular structure with aluminum and glass exterior that resembled a flying saucer and featured strict axial symmetry. The building occupied approximately 1,300 square meters and displayed around 1,400 artifacts, including early Soviet Ford A models and experimental AZLK prototypes.
The building was completed in 1980 during the Moscow Olympics as an exhibition space for Soviet automobile production. It operated as a museum until 1996 and was eventually demolished in 2022.
The exhibition space arranged vehicles in a circular pattern around the central support, creating a flow that visitors could follow naturally. This layout emphasized the story of Soviet automotive progress and made industrial advancement feel immediate and personal.
The building stood prominently on Volgogradsky Prospect and was easy to spot with its distinctive circular design. Access to the exhibition was straightforward, with all vehicles and objects presented in a continuous loop without confusing paths.
Architect Yuri Regentov designed the building as his most recognized work, blending Soviet modernist and futuristic forms into a cohesive vision. The flying saucer aesthetic was a bold architectural approach during the 1980s, rarely seen in public buildings of that era.
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