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Ashgabat
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Ashgabat (Turkmen: Aşgabat)[a][b] is the capital and largest city of Turkmenistan.[8] It lies between the Karakum Desert and the Kopetdag mountain range in Central Asia, approximately 50 km (30 mi) away from the Iran-Turkmenistan border. The city has a population of 1,030,063 (2022 census).
Key Information
The city was founded in 1881 on the basis of an Ahal Teke tribal village, and made the capital of the Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic in 1924 when it was known as Poltoratsk.[c] Much of the city was destroyed by the 1948 Ashgabat earthquake, but has since been extensively rebuilt under the rule of Saparmurat Niyazov's "White City" urban renewal project,[9] resulting in monumental projects sheathed in costly white marble.[10] The Soviet-era Karakum Canal runs through the city, carrying waters from the Amu Darya from east to west.[11]
Today, as the capital of an independent Turkmenistan, Ashgabat retains a multiethnic population, with ethnic Turkmen as the majority. In 2021, it celebrated 140 years of its written history.[12]
Etymology
[edit]Ashgabat is called Aşgabat (transliterated as "Ashgabat") in Turkmen, Russian: Ашхабад, romanized: Ashkhabad in Russian from 1925 to 1991, and عشقآباد ('Ešqābād) in Persian. Before 1991, the name was usually spelled Ashkhabad in English, a transliteration of the Russian form. It has also been variously spelled Ashkhabat and Ashgabad. From 1919 until 1927, the city was renamed Poltoratsk after a local revolutionary, Pavel Poltoratskiy.[13]
Although the name literally means "city of love" or "city of devotion" in modern Persian, the name might have been modified through folk etymology. Turkmen historian Ovez Gundogdiyev believes that the name goes back to the Parthian era, 3rd century BC, deriving from the name of the founder of the Parthian Empire, Arsaces I of Parthia, in Persian Ashk-Abad (the city of Ashk/Arsaces).[14]
Geography
[edit]Ashgabat is in near proximity, approximately 50 km (30 mi), to the Iranian border.[15] It occupies a highly seismically active oasis plain bounded on the south by the foothills of the Kopet Dag mountains (Turkmen: Köpetdag) and on the north by the Karakum Desert. It is surrounded by, but not part of, Ahal Province (Turkmen: Ahal welaýaty). The highest point in the city is the 401 metres (1,316 ft) high sandhill upon which the Yyldyz Hotel was built, but most of the city lies between 200 and 255 metres (656 and 837 ft) of elevation. The Karakum Canal runs through the city.[16][17][18]
Like the rest of Turkmenistan, Ashgabat's soil is primarily sediment that accumulated on the bottom of the Paratethys Ocean. The Kopet Dag mountains emerged toward the end of the Cretaceous Period.[19]
Urban layout
[edit]1881 to 1929
[edit]Prior to 1881 any buildings other than yurts were made solely from adobe and were limited to one story in height due to the seismic risk.[20] As of 1900 only one building in the city was two stories tall, the municipal museum.[21] City planning began following the Russian conquest, with "very simple planning schemes". The basic layout of downtown streets "has been preserved to this day and defined the unique character of the city structure combining linear and radial types of layout of blocks". The Russian writer Vasily Yan, who lived in Askhabad from 1901 to 1904, described the city as "a little tidy town consisting of numerous clay houses, surrounded by fruit gardens with straight streets, planted with slim cottonwood, chestnut, and white acacia planned by the hand of military engineers".[22] Another description noted,
- The fortress was the center of the bureaucratic part of the city. Here stood especially sturdy thick-walled houses, with strong window grates and corner buttresses. Earthquakes were less frightening in such houses, and behind the thick walls even in the hottest months some measure of indoor coolness was retained. Each house had a garden around it, on maintenance of which residents spared neither expenditures nor water...Nearer the rail station lived the railroad workers and craftsmen. Here the houses were shorter and more densely spaced, gardens smaller, and dust on the streets greater...
- Gradually a third center of Ashkhabad started to emerge, of the merchants. Roughly equidistant from the rail station and the fortress was laid out a sad marketplace, becoming not only a center of stores and stalls, but a center of gravity for merchants' residence.[23]
1930 to 1948
[edit]In 1930, asphalt was used for the first time to pave Ashgabat's streets.[24] The water supply was increased by piping water from springs in neighboring Gämi and Bagyr.[24]
The first master plan for Ashgabat, developed between 1935 and 1937 at the Moscow Institute of Geodesy, Aerial Imagery, and Cartography, envisioned expansion to the west, including irrigation and greening of the Bikrova canyon (today Bekrewe).[18] The city architect's office was created in 1936 but was unable to implement the new master plan "as it implied significant demolition of the existing buildings".[25] A description of Ashgabat published in 1948 just before the earthquake noted, "In Ashgabat there are nearly no tall buildings, thus every two-story building is visible from above...", i.e., from the foothills. The tallest structures were the clock tower of the textile mill, the "round smokestack of the glass factory", two "exceptionally thin minarets" of the "former mosque", and "two splendid towers over the long building of the main city hotel".[23]
Impact of the 1948 earthquake
[edit]
During the 1948 earthquake, since the bulk of Ashgabat at that time was built of either adobe or fired brick, all but a very few buildings collapsed or were damaged beyond repair (the reinforced concrete grain elevator, Church of St. Alexander Nevsky, and Kärz Bank were among the structures that survived).[26][27] According to Turkmenistan's official news agency,
- Nearly all one-story residential buildings in the city made of mud brick were destroyed, 95 percent of all one-story buildings made of fired brick, and the remaining structures were damaged beyond repair. The number of inhabitable buildings was in single digits, and at that, only after capital renovation.[25]
A new general plan was hastily developed by July 1949. The city was divided into four zones: central, northern, eastern, and southwestern. Reconstruction of the city began in that year.[18][25] Thus from the early 1950s through 1991 Ashgabat's skyline was dominated by the Brutalist Style favored by post-Stalin Soviet architects.[28] The city's central avenue, Magtymguly (former Kuropatkin, Freedom, and Stalin Avenue), featured "monotonous and primarily two-story construction of administrative and residential buildings". This reconstruction "preserved the existing network of city streets as it was economically unjustified to redesign them".[25] The city was described as "...a Communist-era backwater, rebuilt into a typically drab provincial Soviet city..."[29] The plan was updated in 1959.[30]
Among the buildings erected in the 1950s and 1960s were the headquarters of the Central Committee of the Turkmenistan Communist Party, the Council of Ministers Building, the Mollanepes Academic Drama Theater, the former Ashkhabad Hotel (now renamed Paytagt), the Academy of Sciences complex, and the downtown library building. On then-Karl Marx Square stood a monument to the Soviet "fighters for victory of Soviet power in Turkmenistan".[18]
The 1960s master plan
[edit]The Turkmen State Project Institute undertook a feasibility study in the mid-1960s to forecast Ashgabat's development to the year 2000, and on that basis to develop a new master plan. Up until then the city had largely expanded to the east, but now the plan called for development to the south and west. This plan was used for about 20 years, and led to construction of the city's first four-story apartment buildings in the Howdan (Russian: Гаудан) microdistricts, formerly the site of the Ashgabat-South aerodrome, as well as annexation of three collective farms in the near suburbs and their conversion into residential neighborhoods, one of which, Leningrad kolkhoz, to this day is referred to informally by its former name.[25][31] The plan was reworked in 1974, and this resulted in relocation of several industrial plants away from the city center, and thus creation of the industrial zones to the northwest, south, southeast, and northeast.[18]
Between 1961 and 1987 the city architect was Abdulla Ahmedov, who introduced Soviet modernism to Ashgabat.[32] Ahmedov's greatest architectural accomplishment during this period is considered the Ashgabat Hotel (today renamed Paytagt Hotel), built between 1964 and 1970, "a harmonious synthesis of architecture and monumental art".[32]
Growth
[edit]In 1948 Ashgabat was described before the earthquake as lying "on a sloping plain of the Kopet-Dag foothills, stretching seven kilometers from west to east and five kilometers from the railroad right-of-way to the south, in the direction of the mountains".[23] Through the mid-1970s, Ashgabat was a compact city, as shown by the 1974 Soviet military's General Staff map J-40-081.[33] The village of Köşi, collective farm "Leningrad", airport, and suburbs to the north were outside the city limits.
Beginning in the 1970s, Ashgabat's boundaries shifted outward, with the aforementioned municipalities annexed, the aerodrome at Howdan redeveloped, and creation of the Parahat (Russian: Mir) neighborhoods to the south and industrial parks to the east. In 2013, Ashgabat annexed a portion of the then-Ruhabat district of Ahal Province as well as the city of Abadan (previously named Büzmeýin, and renamed that as a neighborhood) plus all land and villages in between. The southern boundary of Ashgabat was extended southward to the foothills of the Kopet Dag mountains. Overall, Ashgabat's land area rose by 37,654 hectares. The following municipalities were abolished due to their incorporation into the city of Ashgabat: city of Abadan, towns of Jülge and Ruhabat, villages of Gökje, Gypjak, Birleşik, Magaryf, Herrikgala, Ýalkym, Gurtly, Hellewler, Ylmy-Tejribe bazasy, Ýasmansalyk, Köne Gurtly, Gulantäzekli, Serdar ýoly, Gaňtar, Gyzyljagala, Inerçýage, Tarhan, Topurly, and Ussagulla.[34][35][36] A further expansion occurred January 5, 2018, when additional land to the north was annexed, incorporating the Gurtly Reservoir and two greenfield residential construction projects, known today as Täze Zaman. This statute also established the current four boroughs of Ashgabat.[37][38]
Climate
[edit]| Ashgabat | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Climate chart (explanation) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Kopet Dag mountain range is about 25 kilometres (16 mi) to the south, and Ashgabat's northern boundary touches the Kara-Kum desert. Because of this Ashgabat has a cold desert climate (Köppen climate classification: BWk, bordering on BWh) with mediterranean influences. It features very hot, dry summers and cool, short, somewhat moist, winters. The average high temperature in July is 38.3 °C (100.9 °F). Nighttimes in the summer are warm, with an average minimum temperature in July of 23.8 °C (75 °F). The average January high temperature is 8.6 °C (47.5 °F), and the average low temperature is −0.4 °C (31.3 °F). The highest temperature ever recorded in Ashgabat is 47.2 °C (117 °F), recorded in June 2015.[39] A low temperature of −24.1 °C (−11 °F) was recorded in January 1969.[39] Snow is infrequent in the area. Annual precipitation is only 201 millimetres (7.91 in); March and April are the wettest months, and June to September are the driest months. In May 2022, 338 millimetres (13.31 in), 1,352% of the monthly normal, was reported.[40]
| Climate data for Ashgabat (1991–2020, extremes 1893–present) | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
| Record high °C (°F) | 27.8 (82.0) |
32.6 (90.7) |
38.6 (101.5) |
39.6 (103.3) |
45.6 (114.1) |
47.2 (117.0) |
46.8 (116.2) |
45.7 (114.3) |
45.4 (113.7) |
40.1 (104.2) |
35.0 (95.0) |
33.1 (91.6) |
47.2 (117.0) |
| Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 9.0 (48.2) |
11.1 (52.0) |
17.0 (62.6) |
23.9 (75.0) |
30.5 (86.9) |
36.2 (97.2) |
38.4 (101.1) |
37.2 (99.0) |
31.8 (89.2) |
24.4 (75.9) |
15.7 (60.3) |
9.8 (49.6) |
23.8 (74.8) |
| Daily mean °C (°F) | 3.9 (39.0) |
5.7 (42.3) |
11.1 (52.0) |
17.6 (63.7) |
24.1 (75.4) |
29.6 (85.3) |
31.7 (89.1) |
30.0 (86.0) |
24.3 (75.7) |
17.1 (62.8) |
9.7 (49.5) |
5.0 (41.0) |
17.5 (63.5) |
| Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | −0.1 (31.8) |
1.3 (34.3) |
6.0 (42.8) |
11.8 (53.2) |
17.5 (63.5) |
22.3 (72.1) |
24.5 (76.1) |
22.4 (72.3) |
17.1 (62.8) |
10.8 (51.4) |
5.0 (41.0) |
1.1 (34.0) |
11.6 (52.9) |
| Record low °C (°F) | −24.1 (−11.4) |
−20.8 (−5.4) |
−13.3 (8.1) |
−0.8 (30.6) |
1.3 (34.3) |
9.2 (48.6) |
13.8 (56.8) |
9.5 (49.1) |
2.0 (35.6) |
−5.0 (23.0) |
−13.1 (8.4) |
−18.1 (−0.6) |
−24.1 (−11.4) |
| Average precipitation mm (inches) | 21 (0.8) |
32 (1.3) |
39 (1.5) |
28 (1.1) |
21 (0.8) |
8 (0.3) |
3 (0.1) |
2 (0.1) |
3 (0.1) |
12 (0.5) |
22 (0.9) |
17 (0.7) |
221 (8.7) |
| Average rainy days | 9 | 9 | 13 | 12 | 10 | 5 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 6 | 8 | 10 | 90 |
| Average snowy days | 5 | 5 | 1 | 0.03 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.1 | 1 | 3 | 15 |
| Average relative humidity (%) | 78 | 72 | 66 | 58 | 47 | 35 | 34 | 34 | 40 | 54 | 68 | 77 | 55 |
| Mean monthly sunshine hours | 112.7 | 119.4 | 146.2 | 194.4 | 275.1 | 335.5 | 353.8 | 348.1 | 289.2 | 216.8 | 157.2 | 104.4 | 2,652.8 |
| Mean daily sunshine hours | 3.6 | 4.2 | 4.7 | 6.5 | 8.9 | 11.2 | 11.4 | 11.2 | 9.6 | 7.0 | 5.2 | 3.4 | 7.3 |
| Source 1: Pogoda.ru.net[41] | |||||||||||||
| Source 2: NOAA (Sunshine hours 1961–1990),[42] Deutscher Wetterdienst (daily sun 1961-1990)[43] | |||||||||||||
History
[edit]Ashgabat grew on the ruins of the Silk Road city of Konjikala, first mentioned as a wine-producing village in the 1st-2nd century BC and leveled by an earthquake in the 1st century BC. Konjikala was rebuilt because of its advantageous location on the Silk Road and it flourished until its destruction by Mongols in the 13th century. After that it survived as a small village until Russians took over in the 19th century.[44][45]
The near suburb of Köşi, until 2013 a separate village but in that year annexed by Ashgabat, may have been site of a Parthian fortress constructed to protect the capital city, Nisa, based on discoveries of pottery and other artifacts in the 1970s and as recently as 2020. Other artifacts indicating settlement during the Parthian period were reportedly discovered during laying of telephone cables on the site of the Gülistan (Russian) Bazaar in downtown Ashgabat.[46]
According to Muradov, the first mention of the settlement in modern times is found in Khiva chronicles of 1811.[47]
British Lieutenant Colonel H.C. Stuart reported in 1881 that the Ahal branch of the Teke tribe of the Turkmen ethnic group arrived in the area around 1830 and established several semi-nomadic villages (auls) between what are now the city of Gyzylarbat and village of Gäwers, inclusive. One of these villages was named Askhabad.[48] The first Russian reference to Ashgabat dates to 1850, in a document kept in the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs archives listing 43 Ahal fortresses, "Ishkhabad" among them.[22] It was described as a "typical Turkmen aul".[23]
It was formally part of Persia but de facto autonomous under Turkoman tribal control until Russian forces defeated the Teke army at the Battle of Geok Tepe in January 1881. Persia ceded Askhabad to the Russian Empire in September 1881 under the terms of the Akhal Treaty.
Russian Empire
[edit]The city was officially founded January 18, 1881, as a fortified garrison and was named after the Turkmen village on that site.[23][49][18][50] Russian military engineers platted the garrison settlement "on the western edge of the aul (village) of Askhabad on the Gaudan (Howdan) road leading to Persia. The fortress stood on a hill 12 meters high, on which was constructed a citadel-redoubt, and below [it], the residential area, surrounded by walls and a moat."[18] Sixty-seven Turkmen families were compensated for the land confiscated from them for this construction.[50]
Russia developed the area due to its proximity to the border of British-influenced Persia. In 1882 a wagon road was built through the mountains to Quchan, Iran, which led to increased trade as well as settlement of Persian and Armenian merchants in Askhabad.[50] The Trans-Caspian railway reached Askhabad in 1885. The population grew from 2,500 in 1881 to 10,000 in 1886 and 19,428 (of whom one third were Persian) by 1897.[50][51] The Transcaspian Public Library was established in 1885, boys and girls high schools were founded in 1886, and the Kuropatkin School of Horticulture and Viticulture appeared in 1890. The first telephone station was installed in 1900.[50]
The city was regarded as a pleasant municipality with European-style buildings, shops, and hotels. Several streets were named after Russian military figures, reflecting its status as a garrison town, including the main square, named in honor of General Mikhail Skobelev, commander of Russian forces during the 1880–1881 Trans-Caspian military campaign. These included as well the western boundary avenue, named in honor of General Nikolai Grodekov, and the city's central avenue, renamed in the 1890s to honor General and Trans-Caspian Governor-General Aleksey Kuropatkin, both of whom had served in the Trans-Caspian campaign under Skobolev's command.[52]
In 1908, the first Bahá'í House of Worship was built in Askhabad. It was badly damaged in the 1948 earthquake and finally demolished in 1963.[53][54] The community of the Bahá'í Faith in Turkmenistan was largely based in Askhabad.
By 1915 Askhabad featured branches of the Russian State Bank, Persian Accounting Loan Bank, Russian-Asian Bank, Société Générale, and Askhabat Mutual Credit Union.[22]
Soviet period
[edit]Soviet rule was established in Ashgabat in December 1917. However, in July 1918, a coalition of Mensheviks, Social Revolutionaries, and Tsarist former officers of the Imperial Russian Army revolted against the Bolshevik rule emanating from Tashkent and established the Ashkhabad Executive Committee. After receiving some support (but even more promises) from General Malleson, the British withdrew in April 1919 and the Tashkent Soviet resumed control of the city.
In 1919, the city was renamed Poltoratsk (Russian: Полторацк), after Pavel Poltoratskiy, the Chairman of the Soviet of National Economy of the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.[49][55] When the Turkmen SSR was established in 1924, Poltoratsk became its capital. The original name but in the form of "Ashkhabad" rather than "Askhabad" was restored in 1927.[49] In keeping with standard Soviet practice, Imperial Russian street names were changed to honor prominent Communists, Russians, or socialist ideals. For example, Skobolev Square became Karl Marx Square, Grodekov Street became Ostrovskiy Street, and Kuropatkin Avenue became Freedom Avenue (and from 1953 to 1961, following Joseph Stalin's death, Stalin Avenue).[56][57] In 1927 a statue of Vladimir Lenin designed by A.A. Karelin and Ye.R. Tripolskaya was erected.[18]
During World War II Ashgabat became a refuge for both institutions, including Moscow State University and the Kiev film studio, and individuals. Roughly 8,000 refugees were quartered in private homes during the war.[24] Among the outsiders who escaped to Ashgabat during the war were Andrei Sakharov and author Yury Olesha. In 1944 Ukrainian motion picture director Mark Donskoy filmed Rainbow (Ukrainian: Веселка, Russian: Радуга) in Ashgabat, which was nominated for an Academy Award as best foreign film.[24]
From this period onward, the city experienced rapid growth and industrialisation, although severely disrupted by a major earthquake on October 6, 1948. An estimated 7.3 on the Surface magnitude scale, the earthquake killed 110–176,000[58][59][60][61] (two-thirds of the population of the city), although the official number announced by Soviet news was only 40,000.[62] The earthquake was recorded as one of the deadliest natural disasters in Soviet history.
Independence
[edit]
In July 2003, street names in Ashgabat were replaced by serial numbers except for nine major highways, some named after Saparmurat Niyazov, his father, and his mother. The Presidential Palace Square was designated 2000 to symbolize the beginning of the 21st century. The rest of the streets were assigned larger or smaller four-digit numerical names. Following Niyazov's death in 2006, Soviet-era street names were restored, though in the years since, many of them have been replaced with names honoring Turkmen scholars, poets, military heroes, and figures from art and culture, as well as celebrating the nation's independence. For example, Karl Marx Square became Garaşsyzlyk (Independence) Square, Ostrovskiy Street became Abba Annaýew (in honor of President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov's great-uncle), and Freedom Avenue became Magtymguly.[56][57][63][64]
In 2013, the city was included in the Guinness Book of Records as possessing the world's highest concentration of white marble buildings.[65]

Ashgabat's "11th Line" project was dedicated on June 29, 2012, including 17 high-rise apartment buildings along 10 ýyl Abadançylyk şaýoly, two secondary schools, two kindergartens, a fire station, and a health clinic.[66] The "12th Line" project was completed October 1, 2014, consisting of a straightening and widening of Atamyrat Nyýazow şaýoly plus construction of 13 high-rise apartment buildings, two secondary schools, two kindergartens, a new headquarters building for the Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs, the Telekeçi shopping center, and the Development Bank. On that same date, the new Cabinet of Ministers building was also opened.[67]
In preparation for the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, the city spent $5 billion on residential construction. December 4, 2014, the president issued a decree calling for construction of 60 9-story apartment buildings in the Parahat-7 microdistrict, a greenfield project in the southeast quadrant of the city.[68] On November 10, 2015, the "13th Line" was dedicated, a complete reconstruction of buildings along Oguzhan köçesi west of Garaşsyzlyk şaýoly.[69] Projects included demolition and redevelopment of the Leningrad kolkhoz neighborhood as the "14th Line", and the Gazha and Vosmushka neighborhoods as the "15th Line".[56][70][71][72][73]

Subsequent to conclusion of the Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, the "16th Line" project, a redevelopment of the Köşi neighborhood and extension of Magtymguly Avenue to the west, was begun in 2018.[74][75] The "16th Line" was dedicated on November 10, 2020; it includes 16 high-rise apartment buildings, the Gül zemin shopping center, and a monument to the Alabay sheepdog.[76] In addition, the Gurtly and Choganly housing complexes, both greenfield projects, were constructed.[77][78][79] In May 2021 the government announced plans for the "17th Line", consisting of a resort complex encircling Golden Lake (Turkmen: Altyn köl), the former Gurtly Reservoir, to include 268 vacation cottages plus buildings for public services and amenities.[80]
On 23 August 2022 the government announced plans to demolish one- and two-story houses in several microdistricts of central Ashgabat and to replace them with modern apartment buildings. A map of the areas intended for urban renewal was broadcast on national television that day, but no indication of a timeline was given.[81][82]
The largest current residential project is construction of "Ashgabat-City" (Turkmen: Aşgabat-siti) north of the Choganly residential neighborhood, which is planned to include over 200 buildings on 744 hectares, and for the first time in the city's history to feature some buildings as tall as 35 stories.[83][84][85][86][87] These will include 180 12- to 35-story residential buildings containing 17,836 apartments intended to house over 107,000 occupants.[88][89][90]
Ashgabat milestones:[91]
- 1882–1918 – administrative center of Russia's Transcaspian Region
- 1918–1925 – administrative center of the Turkmen Oblast in the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic
- since February 1925 – capital of the Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic
- since October 1991 – capital of independent Turkmenistan
Districts
[edit]
Boroughs
[edit]
As of January 5, 2018, Ashgabat includes four boroughs (uly etraplar), each with a presidentially appointed mayor (Turkmen: häkim):[3][92][93][94][95][96][97]
- Bagtyýarlyk etraby (formerly President Niyazov, Lenin District, expanded to include former Ruhabat District plus new territory)
- Berkararlyk etraby (formerly Azatlyk, Sovetskiy District)
- Büzmeýin etraby (formerly Abadan District, expanded to include former Arçabil and Çandybil Districts)
- Köpetdag etraby (formerly Proletarskiy District)
This is a reduction from the previous number of boroughs. Arçabil and Çandybil boroughs were merged on February 4, 2015, and the new etrap, named Arçabil, was in turn renamed Büzmeýin in January 2018. At that time the Abadan borough of Ashgabat, created in 2013 by annexing the town of Abadan and surrounding villages to Abadan's south, was abolished and its territory was merged into the newly renamed Büzmeýin borough. The former Ruhabat borough was abolished at the same time and its territory absorbed by Bagtyýarlyk borough.[98]
On 15 June 2020, Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov announced intention to create a fifth borough of Ashgabat, to be called Altyn etraby, centered on the new resort zone created on the shores of the former Gurtly Water Reservoir, recently renamed "Golden Lake" (Altyn köl).[99][needs update]
Microdistricts
[edit]Ashgabat's boroughs are subdivided into microdistricts (Russian: микрорайоны, singular микрорайон, Turkmen: etrapçalar, singular etrapça). These are administrative units that possess no independent governance structures. They are used for management of utilities and publicly owned housing. Ashgabat includes the following microdistricts:
Demographics
[edit]In 1871, a Russian visitor named Strebnitskiy counted over four thousand "nomad tents" (yurts), implying a population of 16 to 20 thousand Ahal Teke Turkmen, many of whom were killed or dispersed in the 1881 Battle of Geok Tepe. The population was 2,500 in 1881, virtually all Russian.[51] By 1886, Askhabad's population was about 10,000, mainly ethnic Russians.[18][22] Construction of the Trans-Caspian Railway stimulated an influx of migrants seeking employment, particularly from the Caucasus, Volga Valley, and Iran, and Askhabad's subsequent population growth was as follows:
- 1897: 19,426
- 1908: 39,867
- 1911: 45,384
Ethnic Russians dominated the population after 1881, with about 20 percent admixture of Caucasus-origin migrants (mainly Armenian).[18][23] One source indicates that pre-revolutionary Askhabad had no Turkmen residents at all, and that they lived in nearby auls.[23] This began to change in the 1920s, following imposition of Soviet power, which brought with it forced collectivization. In 1926 Ashkhabad's population of 51,593 included 52.4% Russians, 13.53% Armenian, 4.3% Persians, and 29.8% "other". By 1939, Ashkhabad counted 126,500 residents, including 11.7% Armenian. The 1959 census recorded a population of 169,900, which grew to 338,000 by 1983, including 105 nationalities, of which ethnic Armenians constituted 40 percent.[18]
According to estimates of the 2012 Turkmen census, the Turkmens form 78.5% of the city's population. Russians form 10% of the population, followed by Turks (1.1%), Uzbeks (1.1%), and Azeris (1%).[103]
2022 census
[edit]| Ethnicity | ||
|---|---|---|
| 2022 census[104] | ||
| Population | % | |
| Turkmens | 925,656 | 89.86 |
| Russians | 68,188 | 6.62 |
| Azerbaijanis | 10,376 | 1.0 |
| Armenians | 9,761 | 0.95 |
| Uzbeks | 5,179 | 0.5 |
| Tatars | 2,585 | 0.25 |
| Kurds | 2,159 | 0.21 |
| Ukrainians | 1,460 | 0.14 |
| Kazakhs | 703 | 0.07 |
| Persians | 584 | 0.06 |
| Lezgins | 510 | 0.05 |
| Koreans | 164 | 0.02 |
| Balochi | 184 | 0.02 |
| Afghans | 101 | 0.01 |
| Karakalpaks | 31 | 0.0 |
| Other groups | 2,422 | 0.24 |
| Total | 1,030,063 | 100% |
Architecture
[edit]

Post-1991
[edit]Following independence in 1991, President Saparmurat Niyazov began hiring foreign architectural and construction firms, most prominently Bouygues of France and the Turkish firms Polimeks and Gap Inşaat, the latter a subsidiary of Çalık Holding. These firms blended Persian-style domes, which Niyazov favored, with Greco-Roman architectural elements such as pillars.[105][106][107][108][109]
Following Niyazov's death, domes began to go out of fashion for buildings other than mosques, and public buildings began to take on more modernist characteristics, often with a motif reflecting the structure's intended occupant. For example, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs building is topped by a globe of the Earth, inside which is a conference center; the Development Bank building is topped by a giant coin; the Ministry of Health and Medical Industry building is shaped like a stylized caduceus, the dental hospital is shaped like a molar and the international terminal of Ashgabat International Airport is shaped like a falcon.[110] The dominant characteristic of new construction since 1991 has been nearly universal facing with white marble.[111][20] Another recurring motif is the eight-pointed star of Oguz Han, the largest of which is on the television tower and has entered the Guinness Book of World Records.[112][113][114] The official Turkmen government guide book to Ashgabat refers to the star of Oguz Khan as "...the basic dominant of the whole architectural-art decor..."[22]
After independence, the city architect's office ordered construction of many high-rise (generally 12-story) residential buildings. Modern construction techniques allow high-rise development with good seismic safety. Primarily consisting of residential towers, the first floor is typically used as retail space and for building maintenance.[20]
Monuments and statues
[edit]Ashgabat features many sculptures honoring Turkmen, Turkic, and other Islamic poets and heroes. Four statues, of Lenin, Alexander Pushkin, Taras Shevchenko, and Magtymguly, date to the Soviet period, as do a statue and a bust of Turkmen composer Nury Halmammedov. Since then, however, much new sculpture has appeared. In Ylham (Inspiration) Park are found numerous busts and statues. Additional statues can be seen in the VDNH Park. A monumental statue of the current president was dedicated in May 2015 near Ashgabat Stadium. One also finds statues of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and Alp Arslan. In addition to the statue of former President Niyazov atop the Neutrality Monument, a gilded statue of him stands before the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and a gilded seated statue of him graces the entry to the Turkmen Agricultural University.
Since independence in 1991, several monuments to features of Turkmenistan's governance have been erected: to neutrality, to the constitution, to the renaissance of Turkmenistan, to independence, as well as a special monument to former President Saparmurat Niyazov's magnum opus, Ruhnama.
The memorial complex in Bekrewe includes a statue of a bull with the Earth balanced on its horns, symbolizing the 1948 earthquake, and a statue of two traditionally dressed Turkmen warriors guarding a widow grieving the death of her husband in World War II. The exterior wall of the museum features bas reliefs depicting events in Turkmenistan's history.
In advance of the V Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games held in September 2017, roughly one billion dollars was spent on widening and upgrading Ashgabat's major thoroughfares.[56] Several traffic circles were created, in which were placed mainly abstract monuments. As of 2020 the most recent addition to these are the Bicycle Monument (Turkmen: Welosiped binasy), which President Berdimuhamedov dedicated on June 3, 2020, and the Turkmen Alabay monument, dedicated on November 10, 2020.[115][116]
In May 2024, a monument dedicated to the 300th anniversary of the birth of Turkmen poet and philosopher Magtymguly Pyragy was unveiled in Ashgabat, near Walk of Health at the foot of the Kopetdag mountain range.[117] The 60-meter sculpture of the poet stands on a 20-meter pedestal, to which a majestic staircase with massive granite bowls leads.[118][119]
In October 2024, a statue of Kazakh poet Abai Qunanbaiuly was unveiled in Lachyn Park in Ashgabat.[120]
Controversies
[edit]Much of the urban renewal since 1991 has involved demolition of traditional single-family residential housing, commonly with allegedly forced eviction of residents, and often without compensation to the homeowners. In particular, private homes rebuilt in neighborhoods flattened by the 1948 earthquake, many of which were never formally registered with the government, were subject to confiscation and demolition without compensation, as were former dacha communities like Ruhabat, Berzengi, and Choganly, which in nearly all cases lacked formal ownership documents.[121][122][123][124][125][126]
First Baha'i Temple in the world
[edit]
When Ashgabat was under Russian rule, the number of Bahá'ís in the city rose to over 1,000, and a Bahá'í community was established, with its own schools, medical facilities and cemetery. The community elected one of the first Bahá'í local administrative institutions. In 1908 the Bahá'í community completed the construction of the first Bahá'í House of Worship, sometimes referred to by its Arabic name of mašriqu-l-'aḏkār (Arabic: مشرق اﻻذكار),[127] where people of all religions may worship God without denominational restrictions.[128] The building was designed under the guidance of `Abdu'l-Bahá by Ustad' Ali-Akbar Banna Yazdi who also wrote a history of the Baha'is in Ashgabat.[129][130]
The House of Worship itself was surrounded by gardens, with four buildings at the four corners of the gardens: a school, a hostel where travelling Bahá'ís were entertained, a small hospital, and a building for groundskeepers.[130]
Under the Soviet policy towards religion, the Bahá'ís, strictly adhering to their principle of obedience to legal government, abandoned these properties in 1928.[131] For the decade from 1938 to 1948, when it was seriously damaged by the earthquake, it was an art gallery. It was demolished in 1963.[128]
Other notable structures
[edit]The Arch of Neutrality was dismantled and re-erected in its original form in the south of the capital.
Turkmenistan Tower, the television and radio broadcasting tower, at a height of 211 meters is the tallest structure in the country. It was dedicated on October 17, 2011.[20]
The administrative center of Ashgabat as the national capital is on the Archabil highway, where several ministries and agencies, as well as educational, research, and cultural centers, are found.[132] The former Novofiryuzenskoye shosse (New Firyuza Highway) was rebuilt by Gap Inşaat in 2004.[citation needed]
Economy
[edit]The principal industries are cotton textiles and metal working. It is a major stop on the Trans-Caspian railway. A large percentage of the employment in Ashgabat is provided by the state institutions; such as the ministries, undersecretariats, and other administrative bodies of the Turkmenistan government. There are also many foreign citizens working as diplomats or clerks in the embassies of their respective countries. Ashgabat lends its name to the Ashgabat Agreement, signed by India, Oman, Iran, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, for creating an international transport and transit corridor facilitating transportation of goods between Central Asia and the Persian Gulf.[133]
In 2019 and 2020, Ashgabat was the most expensive city in the world for foreign expatriates in ECA International's Cost of Living Survey.[134][135][136] It was also listed as the second most expensive city in the world overall by the 2020 Mercer Cost of Living Survey.[137] Its high cost of living for foreigners has been attributed to severe inflation and rising import costs.[134][137][138]
Industry
[edit]Between 1881 and 1921, little industry existed in Ashgabat. Muradov relates that in 1915 the city featured "68 enterprises, mainly semi-handicrafts, with a total of 200-300 workers".[21] Another source relates that as of 1911 roughly half the workforce of somewhat more than 400 "workers" was employed at the railroad depot, engaged in locomotive and railcar maintenance and repair, with the rest occupied in cotton ginning, cottonseed oil extraction, flour milling, and leather-, brick-, glass-, and iron production.[18] By 1915 the city boasted as well three printing houses, an electrical power station, three cotton gins, a creamery, a tannery, and 35 brickyards.[22]
In 1921 Soviet authorities built a new glass plant plus a wine and spirits factory. In the years following several more factories were added, including the "Red Metalworker" iron-working plant (1925), the silk spinning plant (1928), a cotton spinning plant and textile plant (1929), candy factory (1930), garment factory (1933), shoe factory (1934), and a meat cannery (1938).[18] As of 1948, Ashgabat boasted "about twenty large factory-plant enterprises, which produce fabrics, glass, footwear, garments, meat products, dredges, agricultural implement parts and much else".[23][139]
Annexation of the former city of Buzmeyin (Turkmen: Büzmeýin), which from 2002 to 2018 was known as Abadan,[97] brought into Ashgabat's city limits its major industrial suburb. Today's Buzmeyin neighborhood features the Buzmeyin State Electrical Power Plant, and factories for production of reinforced concrete, cement, asbestos roofing, pipes, and concrete blocks, as well as a carpet-weaving factory and soft-drink bottling plant.[18]
Today more than 43 large and 128 medium-sized industrial enterprises along with over 1,700 small industrial facilities are located in Ashgabat and its suburbs.[140] The most important are Ashneftemash, Turkmenkabel, and Turkmenbashy Textile Complex.[141]
Electrical power generation
[edit]The Abadan State Power Plant (now Büzmeýin State Power Plant), commissioned in 1957, was the first large power plant in Turkmenistan. Two gas turbine plants with a capacity of 123 MW each currently generate electricity in this plant.[142] The Ashgabat State Power Plant, located in the southern part of city, began operating in 2006. It is equipped with gas turbine generators with a total capacity of 254.2 megawatts.[142]
Ashgabat also draws power from the Ahal State Power Plant, located outside the city in Ahal Province. It began operating in 2010 with two gas turbines producing 254.2 MW. Three small gas turbines were added in 2013 and two more gas turbines in 2014, bringing capacity to 648.1 MW.[142]
Shopping
[edit]Altyn Asyr Bazaar in Choganly, also known as "Tolkuchka", features manufactured items including traditional fabrics and hand-woven carpets, as well as livestock and used automobiles.
Modern shopping areas are found mostly in central streets,[143] including the modern Berkarar Mall, Arkaç Mall,[144] Ashgabat Shopping and Entertainment Center,[145] Gül Zemin[146][147] and Paýtagt, as well as the 15 Years of Independence Shopping Centre (Turkmen: 15 ýyl Garaşsyzlyk söwda merkezi), colloquially known as the "Wholesale Market" (Russian: Optovyy rynok).[148][149][150]
Local residents tend to shop at traditional bazaars: Gülistan (Russian) Bazaar, Teke Bazaar, Daşoguz Bazaar, Paytagt (Mir) Bazaar, and Jennet Bazaar. The Turkish-owned Yimpaş department store closed as of December 2016.[151]
Transportation
[edit]On 18 October 2006, the Ashgabat Cable Car opened, connecting the city with the foothills of the Kopetdag.[152]
Ashgabat Monorail commenced service in 2016, becoming the first monorail in the Central Asia region.[153][154][155] It is a loop 5.2 kilometers long and circulates exclusively on the territory of the Olympic Village (Turkmen: Olimpiýa şäherçesi).[154][155]
In January 2018, it was reported that black cars had been impounded for weeks in Ashgabat, a result of President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov's conviction that black cars bring bad luck.[156]
The Ukrainian construction firm Interbudmontazh has proposed construction of a subway (metropolitan) line, to connect the Ashgabat-Siti residential area in the northern suburbs to downtown Ashgabat.[157]
Air transport
[edit]

The city is served by the Ashgabat International Airport, expansion of which cost $2.3 billion and which has a design capacity of 14,000,000 passengers per year.[158][159][160] Turkmenistan Airlines is headquartered at the airport.[161] Among the companies that fly from there are Turkmenistan Airlines, S7 Airlines, China Southern Airlines, flyDubai and Turkish Airlines. The destinations mainly European, Southeast Asia and Middle East. Ashgabat also offers air service to and from all the major cities of the Turkmenistan.
Citizens of all countries have the right to visa-free transit through the international transit area of Ashgabat International Airport.[162]
Ashgabat International Airport is connected to the city by a network of public buses.[163]
Autobahn
[edit]
Ashgabat is linked[164] to Tejen,[165][166] Mary, Türkmenabat[167] and neighbouring countries[168] by the country's 600 km autobahn network.[169][170] A six-lane highway is equipped with an advanced traffic management system featuring continuous video surveillance to ensure effective road monitoring. The toll rates range from 0.35 to 0.45 Turkmen manats per kilometer, depending on the type of vehicle.[171]
Railway
[edit]
Ashgabat has a single central railway station. In May 2009 the restoration of the Ashgabat railway station was completed. The railway station is made in Soviet-style architecture with its long point on the building roof.
The Trans-Caspian Railway (Türkmenbaşy–Balkanabat–Bereket–Ashgabat–Mary–Türkmenabat) runs through Ashgabat from east to west. Since 2006 there is also a train line from Ashgabat to the north, the Trans-Karakum Railway.[172]
As of June 2025, the following railway routes are scheduled from and to Ashgabat:[173][174][175][176]
- Ashgabat-Türkmenabat [177]
- Ashgabat-Dashoguz [177]
- Ashgabat-Serhetabat[177]
- Ashgabat-Türkmenbaşy[177]
- Ashgabat-Amyderýa
City buses and trolleybus
[edit]

Public transport in the city consists mainly of buses. More than 100 bus[178][179] lines cover a total range of more than 2,230 kilometres (1,386 miles) with 700 buses running on urban routes. In the 1990s, Iran Khodro O457 (Mercedes-Benz) buses were used in Ashgabat. In the 2000s, they were replaced by korean Hyundai New Super Aero City.[180] buses.[181] Since September 2025, 700 chinese Yutong ZK6128HG buses have been delivered to the city.[182] This buses are equipped with a spacious interior, soft seats with armrests, an air conditioning system, USB charging ports, three doors, video surveillance, GPS, cameras, and a digital fare payment system.[183][184]
Bus timetables and detailed schematic map of the route are at every stop. Distances between stops are about 300–500 meters.
In Ashgabat, travel on city public transport requires a fare. Passengers can either pay in cash by placing money in a box next to the driver (with change provided for large bills) or use the Ýol karty[185] electronic payment system, which has been in full operation since September 20, 2017.[186][187] The fare is 50 Turkmen tenge for city buses and 1 manat for route taxis (marshrutkas). Electronic transport cards, valid for four years, are available in three types: general, student, and pensioner. When boarding through the front door, passengers validate their cards using a special device.[188]
Information about bus routes and stops in Ashgabat is available in the mobile application Duralga [189] and Ýolagçy.[190]
The new International Passenger Bus Terminal of Ashgabat was inaugurated on September 5, 2014.[191][192] It offers intercity service to Bäherden, Türkmenbaşy, Dashoguz, Turkmenabat, Archman, Konye-Urgench, and Mollagara, as well as points in between.[193] The main intracity bus terminals serving Ashgabat are near the Teke Bazaar and at the domestic airport terminal. Intercity lines are operated by Hyundai Universe Luxury, Iran Khodro SC 0457, Sahab Renault and Yutong ZK6129H.
Also, suburban communication has been established with Ýaşlyk, Geok Tepe, Gorjaw, Yzgant, Babarap, Bugdaýly, Annau, Gämi, Owadandepe, Watan, Khurmant, Onaldy, Gami Dacha, Kasamly Julge, Gäwers, Yashyldepe, Akdashayak, Niyazow, Suitchilik, Parahat. PAZ 32054 buses and Volkswagen minibuses operate on suburban routes.[194] Some intercity buses also stop at various other points in Ashgabat, including the airport and railway station.
From October 19, 1964, to December 31, 2011, the city also had the Ashgabat trolleybus system. At the beginning of the twentieth century a narrow-gauge steam railway connected the city with the suburb of Firyuza. As of 2011, there were 7 routes in the city. As of 2011, the Ashgabat trolleybus fleet had 47 trolleybuses (Škoda 14TrM) on its balance sheet. In 2000, the last obsolete trolleybuses of the JuMZ-T2 model were written off.
Taxi
[edit]In Ashgabat and Turkmenistan, taxicabs are mostly white or yellow coloured . Taxis have a small green illuminated cylinder-like "TAXI" sign on the roof of the car.[195]
Typically the taxicabs are Toyota Corolla, JAC J7[196][197][198] and Hyundai Elantra along with other, mainly Asian, brands. Taxicabs are either sedans, station wagons, or MPVs.[199][200] Most taxicabs are automatic transmission, and some have navigation systems on board.
In Ashgabat taxis are available at any time of the day or night. Passengers may also hire taxicabs via mobile apps.[201] Other hailing methods, such as telephone based calls or raising one's hand on the street, are also common as well.
Telecommunication
[edit]As of 2025, Ashgabat has two mobile phone service providers:
- Altyn Asyr is a Turkmen national state company for the provision of communication services, established in 2004. In 2010, the company launched a 3G network of UMTS standard, covering all districts of Ashgabat and the Ashgabat International Airport . On September 18, 2013, the 4G network was put into operation using LTE technology.[202]
- Ashgabat City Telephone Network provides CDMA communication services (over 55 thousand subscribers). The network was created and put into operation by the company for the first time in 2003.[203]
In addition to the mobile network providers, Turkmentelecom provides internet services.
As of June 2025, there are six Turkmentelecom internet cafés operating in Ashgabat. Despite the widespread availability of high-speed internet and devices in Turkmenistan, these cafés remain popular as multifunctional spaces for work, study, and cultural activities. They offer modern equipment and various digital services, such as scanning, printing, and online conferencing.[204]
Turkmenpochta is the official national postal operator of Turkmenistan. Based in Ashgabat, it currently operates through 38 postal offices in city.[205]
Media
[edit]Notable newspapers published in Ashgabat include the daily newspapers Türkmenistan and Neytralny Turkmenistan.[206]

TV
[edit]The main offices of 7 television channels are located in Ashgabat: Altyn Asyr, Yashlyk, Miras, Turkmenistan Sport, Turkmen Owazy, Ashgabat and Turkmenistan TV.[207]
Ashgabat TV is main city channel. The channel tells about the events of social, cultural, economic life, the activities of scientific and educational institutions of the Ashgabat.[208][209]
Almost 136[210] international TV channels are available in the IPTV playlist for subscribers of the Ashgabat City Telephone Network.[211] Most of them are thematic channels: news, sports, scientific and educational, TV channels for children, channels of various genres of cinema, music.[210]
Residents of Ashgabat also watch television via satellite dishes.[212]
Radio
[edit]As of 2008, Ashgabat has 4 FM stations: Owaz, Char Tarapdan, Miras and Watan. These stations can additionally be streamed through Turkmentelecom's website.[213]
Human resources
[edit]Science and education
[edit]


Ashgabat is the most important educational center of Turkmenistan with several institutions of higher education. Magtymguly Turkmen State University was founded in 1950. The main university building is located on Beýik Saparmyrat Türkmenbaşy şaýoly. Turkmen State Medical University is situated in Ashgabat as well. It is subordinate to the Ministry of Health and Pharmaceutical Industry of Turkmenistan. Other prominent institutions are the Turkmen State Institute of Economics and Management, a main business school founded in 1980, as well as the Turkmen State Institute of Architecture and Construction, Turkmen Agricultural University, and The National Institute of Sports and Tourism of Turkmenistan. In 2016, the English- and Japanese-medium Oguz Khan University of Engineering Technologies was opened with support of the Japanese government. The International University of Humanities and Development is another English-medium institution of higher education. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs' training ground is the Institute of International Relations.[214][215]
In 2025, the International University of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs opened in Ashgabat. The first private university in the country.[216] It offers paid 5-year programs in fields like construction, agriculture, IT, business, and trade, with instruction in Turkmen and English.[217][218]
Ashgabat is home to five military academies: the Military Institute, the Naval Institute, the Border Guards Institute, the Institute of National Security, and the Ministry of Internal Affairs Institute. In 2020 the Military Institute began accepting applications from women.[215][219]
Four international secondary schools operate in Ashgabat. The Russian Embassy sponsors the Russian-medium A.S. Pushkin Russo-Turkmen School, the French construction company Bouygues sponsors a French school for children of its Francophone employees, the Turkish Embassy sponsors the Turkish-medium Turgut Ozal Turkmen-Turkish School, and the American Embassy sponsors the English-medium Ashgabat International School.[220][221][222][223]
Prior to establishment of Soviet authority in Turkmenistan, Ashgabat had only 11 schools and no scientific or research centers.[18] By 1948 Ashgabat had three institutions of higher education, 20 technical schools, 60 libraries, "and approximately the same number of kindergartens".[23]
The Turkmen Academy of Sciences was founded June 29, 1951, and includes the unique Desert Institute among its 26 scientific research institutes, as well as the State Seismological Service, 17-degree-granting schools, two medical research centers, a library, and two print shops. The Academy of Sciences is the only institution in Turkmenistan accredited to award postgraduate degrees. In 2019, President Berdimuhamedov decreed that state funding of the Academy of Sciences would end within three years.[18][224][225][226][227] Prior to founding of the Turkmen Academy of Sciences, local scientific-research institutes, all located in a single two-story building, were subordinate to the USSR Academy of Sciences.[23]
Health
[edit]Ashgabat is a center for healthcare and medical training of Turkmenistan. Large-scale reconstruction work on buildings and modernization of the material and technical base of existing healthcare institutions is constantly ongoing in the city.[228]
The Directorate of International Medical Centers[229] in Ashgabat includes International Center Ene mähri[230] (maternity hospital), International Center of Endocrinology and Surgery,[231] International Center of Head and Neck Diseases,[232] International Center of Eye Diseases,[233] Ashgabat Dental Center,[234] International Center of Cardiology,[235] International Center of Internal Medicine,[236] International Center of Neurology,[237] International Diagnostic Center,[238] International Education and Science Center,[239] International Diagnostic Center,[238] International Education and Science Center,[239] International Center of Traumatology[240] and International Burn Center.[241] The main medical centers are located along Professor Hans Meissner Avenue in the south of Ashgabat.[242] In 2024, they were opened International Health and Rehabilitation Center, and the International Scientific and Clinical Center of Physiology.[243][244]
Medical and preventive institutions in Ashgabat include: Scientific-Clinical Center of Oncology,[245] Scientific-clinical center for Maternal and Child health,[246] Treatment and Consultative centre named after S.А.Niyazov,[247] Hospital with Scientific Clinical Centre of Cardiology,[248] Emergency First Aid Center,[249] Central Bureau of Pathologic Anatomy,[250] Central Bureau of Forensic Medicine,[251] Central Medical-Recovery Hospital, Medical Diagnostic Center.[252]
The Directorate of Infectious Disease Centers is located in the Choganly residential complex in the north of Ashgabat, which includes Central Dermatovenerological Hospital,[253] Treatment and prevention Center for infectious diseases,[254] Blood Center, National AIDS Prevention Center, Center for Treatment and Prevention of Tuberculosis and Centralized Laboratory.[255]
The central office of the State Sanitary and Epidemiological Service is located in Ashgabat.[256] The Center for Public Health and Nutrition[257] and the Center for the Prevention of Particularly Dangerous Infections[258] operate in Ashgabat.
As of 2018, there are 16 outpatient clinic's operating in the Ashgabat.[259]
Medical education
[edit]The following higher and secondary medical educational institutions operate in Ashgabat: Turkmen State Medical University named after Myrat Garryev, Indira Gandhi Secondary Medical School of Ashgabat. The following were established at the Turkmen State Medical University: in 2011 – the Scientific and Clinical Center for Eye Diseases, in 2013 – the Educational and Industrial Center for Dentistry, and in 2015 – the Educational and Scientific Center for the Protection of Maternal and Child Health.[260]
Medical industry
[edit]The city pays great attention to the development of the pharmaceutical industry. The following medical industry and pharmaceutical supply institutions operate in Ashgabat: Turkmendermansenagat Association, Main Pharmacy Association, Center for Drug Registration and State Quality Control, Institute of Medicinal Plants, Saglyk Pharmaceutical Enterprise, Türkmen Ajanta Pharma Limited Joint Venture, Tenekär Pharmaceutical Enterprise, Berzengi Mineral Healing Water Enterprise, Disinfectant Solutions Production Enterprise.[261]
Sanatoriums
[edit]The Berzeňňi Sanatorium is located at the foothills of the Kopetdag mountains, 7.5 kilometers south of center of Ashgabat. Operating since 1967, a new building was inaugurated in 2012. The sanatorium features a unique mineral water source from a 1,600-meter-deep well. This water has a distinct hydrochemical composition, including magnesium sulfate, potassium, and low mineralization, and has various therapeutic properties. It is used to treat conditions such as digestive system diseases, hypertension, cardiovascular issues, and joint diseases. The sanatorium operates year-round, offering both outpatient and spa treatments.[262]
Culture
[edit]Ashgabat is the cultural heart of Turkmenistan.[263] Ashgabat enjoys numerous theatres, museums, galleries, concert halls, cinemas and foreign cultural institutions.
Museums and galleries
[edit]
On March 17, 1899, the official opening of the Trans-Caspian Regional Museum took place in Ashgabat. On November 12, 1998, the opening of the National Museum of Turkmenistan took place.[264] Its primary goal is to chronicle Turkmenistan's history in various forms from the earliest periods using historical and archaeological collections. Since 2013, the museum began to be called The State Museum of the State Cultural Center of Turkmenistan. The total area of the museum is 165,323.21 m2. On the ground floor of the main building there is a department of Turkmenistan Independence, a department of Turkmen carpet and temporary exhibitions, on the second floor there is a department of Ancient History, Margush, Parthia and two halls of the history of the Middle Ages. The Museum of the President of Turkmenistan of the State Museum of the State Cultural Center of Turkmenistan was commissioned in June 2009. The main objective of this museum is a thorough study of information about the domestic and foreign policies of Turkmenistan. The Museum of Ethnography and Local History of the State Museum of the State Cultural Center of Turkmenistan opened in May 2009. The exhibition on the first floor of the museum is dedicated to the nature of Turkmenistan. On the second floor there is an exhibition concerning the ethnography of Turkmenistan. The exhibition of the Museum of Nature consists of 11 sections.[265]
Museums include the Turkmen Fine Arts Museum and Turkmen Carpet Museum, noted for their impressive collection of woven carpets as well as a Turkmen history museum and the Ashgabat National Museum of History, which displays artifacts dating back to the Parthian and Persian civilizations.
The Watan Mukaddesligi Museum is located in the southwest of Ashgabat, within the Halk Hakydasy Memorial Complex. Opened in 2014, the museum focuses on preserving and showcasing the historical and cultural heritage of Turkmenistan. It features four thematic halls dedicated to events such as the Battle of Geoktepe, World War II, the 1948 Ashgabat earthquake, and the modern development of Ashgabat. The museum houses over 1,000 exhibits.[266]
Since 2024, a private art gallery ART-bazar has been operating in Ashgabat.[267] ART-bazar is a creative space in Ashgabat showcasing works by artisans from various regions of Turkmenistan. It features a range of traditional crafts, including ceramics, paintings, felt tapestries, leather items, and handmade paper, offering visitors an introduction to the country's artistic and cultural heritage.
Performing arts
[edit]Ashgabat's major theaters are:
- Alp Arslan National Drama Theatre
- Magtymguly National Musical and Drama Theatre
- Main Drama Theatre named by Saparmurat Turkmenbashi
- Mollanepes Students Theatre
- Mukams Palace
- Pushkin State Russian Drama Theatre
- Theatre "Art Ist"
- Turkmen State Puppet Theatere
- Turkmen State Circus
Each of several former municipalities annexed by Ashgabat also features local a "house of culture" Turkmen: Medeniýet Öýi.
Cinemas
[edit]Ashgabat has six cinemas. In 2011, Aşgabat Cinema, the first 3D cinema in Turkmenistan, opened in Ashgabat.[268] The Watan and Turkmenistan theaters were reconstructed.[269] Additional cinemas are located in the Berkarar Mall,[270] the Gül Zemin Mall and Arkach Mall.
Libraries
[edit]The State Library of Turkmenistan was founded in 1892 and has undergone several name changes since then. In 1976, a new building was constructed for the library, and in 1992, it was granted national status. Since 2007, it has been part of the State Culture Center of Turkmenistan. The library houses over 6 million items and actively develops electronic resources.[271][272]
The State Children's Library of Turkmenistan named after Bazar Amanov was established in 1935. It serves as the national repository of children's literature and a methodological center for children's and school libraries. The library includes specialized sections for book storage, cataloging, and services for different age groups, from preschool children to high school students, as well as an arts department. Since 2016, the library has been operating an integrated electronic library system.[273] The library's collection consists of over 250,000 items.[274]
Main sights
[edit]
Ashgabat was home to the Arch of Neutrality, a 75 m (250 ft) tall tripod crowned by a golden statue of late president Saparmurat Niyazov (also known as Turkmenbashy, or head Turkmen). The 15 m (50 ft) high statue, which rotated in order to always face the sun during daylight hours, was removed on August 26, 2010, after Niyazov's successor, current President Berdimuhamedov, made clear earlier in the year that the statue was to be taken out of Ashgabat's Independence Square.[275] In 2011 a Monument to the Constitution was built, its total height of 185 m (607 ft) makes it the second tallest structure in Turkmenistan.[276]
Alem Cultural and Entertainment Center was recognised by Guinness World Records as the world's tallest Ferris wheel in an enclosed space.[277] The Ashgabat Flagpole is the fifth tallest free–standing flagpole in the world, standing at 436 ft (133 m) tall. The Ashgabat Fountain has the world's greatest number of fountain pools in a public place.[278][279] Ashgabat also features Turkmenistan Tower which is the tallest tower in Turkmenistan, the decorative octagonal Star of Oguzkhan is recognized as the world's largest architectural image of the star and entered in the Guinness World Records.[280]
Palaces
[edit]- Oguzhan Presidential Palace, the official presidential headquarters.
- Ruhyýet Palace, a place for official state events, forums, meetings, inaugurations.
- Wedding Palace, a civil registry building.[281]
Parks and squares
[edit]Ashgabat has many parks and open spaces, mainly established in the early years of the Independence and well maintained and expanded thereafter. The most important of these parks are: the Botanical Garden, Güneş, Turkmen-Turkish friendship, Independence. The oldest city park, Ashgabat, was founded in 1887 and is colloquially known as First Park.[282] In the center of Ashgabat is the Inspiration Alley, an art-park complex which is a favorite place for many locals. The amusement park World of Turkmenbashi Tales is a local equivalent to Disneyland. Squares: 10 Years of Turkmenistan Independence, Magtymguly, Eternal Flame, Zelili, Chyrchyk, Garashsyzlyk, March 8, Gerogly, Dolphin, 15 years of Independence, Ruhyýet, 10 ýyl Abadançylyk, Ylham and Tashkent.
The Ashgabat Botanical Garden was founded on 1 October 1929, and is the oldest botanical garden in Central Asia.[283][284][285] It covers a territory of approximately 18 hectares, and contains a live exhibition of more than 500 different species of plants coming from various parts of the world.[286][287]
Halk Hakydasy Memorial Complex
[edit]
Halk Hakydasy Memorial Complex was opened in 2014 in remembrance of those killed in the Battle of Geok Tepe in 1881, during World War II, and to commemorate of the victims of the 1948 Ashgabat earthquake. It is located in the southwestern part of the city on Bekreve street.[288][289]
Magtymguly Pyragy Cultural and Park Complex
[edit]In 2024, monuments dedicated to 24 foreign writers and poets were erected in the Magtymguly Pyragy Cultural and Park Complex in Ashgabat.[290] These statues honor renowned figures such as Sayat-Nova, Yanka Kupala, Du Fu, Honoré de Balzac, Shota Rustaveli, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Sándor Petőfi, Rabindranath Tagore, Hafez Shirazi, Dante Alighieri, Yasunari Kawabata, Kurmangazy Sagyrbayuly, Chingiz Aitmatov, Raja Ali Haji, Adam Mickiewicz, Mihai Eminescu, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Juan Jiménez, Sayido Nasafiy, Yunus Emre, Hryhorii Skovoroda, William Shakespeare, Langston Hughes and Alisher Navoi. Each sculpture captures the essence and unique spirit of the artist's work.
Mosques
[edit]
Major mosques in Ashgabat include:
- Türkmenbaşy Ruhy Mosque
- Ärtogrul Gazy Mosque, a gift from Turkey, was inaugurated in 1998 and resembles the Blue Mosque in Istanbul.
- Hezreti Osman Mosque in the 8th microdistrict
- Hezreti Omar Mosque in the Parahat 7 microdistrict[291]
- Azadi Mosque on Zarpçi street
- Martyrs (Turkmen: Şehitler) Mosque on Görogly street
- Shia Mosque near the Iranian Embassy
There are also several mosques in former towns and villages annexed by Ashgabat and thus now neighborhoods within the city limits.
Churches
[edit]Ashgabat has five operating Christian churches. Four are Russian Orthodox churches:[292]
- Saint Alexander Nevsky Church, founded in 1882 as parish church of the Russian military garrison, consecrated in 1900, located in the 30th Microdistrict (Russian: Храм святого благоверного великого князя Александра Невского)
- Temple of Saint Nicholas the Miracle-Worker, located inside the Khitrovka Cemetery (Russian: храм святителя и Чудотворца Николая)
- Temple of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, located near the Ruhnama School (Russian: храм Воскресения Христова)
- Temple of the Holy Equals to Apostles Cyril and Methodius, located in Büzmeýin (Russian: Храм святых равноапостольных Кирилла и Мефодия)
The Roman Catholic Chapel of the Transfiguration operates on the grounds of the Apostolic nunciature.
Other Christian denominations exist but as of 2019 only two were registered with the government and thus able to operate legally. The U.S. Department of State reported that Turkmen authorities "scrutinize or obstruct religious groups attempting to purchase or lease buildings or land for religious purposes".[293]
Sports
[edit]

The main sporting venues in Ashgabat are the Olympic Stadium, Ashgabat Stadium, the National Olympic ice rink, Sports complex for winter sports and the Ashgabat Watersports Complex.
Ashgabat was chosen as the host city of the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games. Between 2010 and 2017 an Olympic Village was built by the Turkish firm Polimeks south of the city center, at a cost of $5 billion.[294][295]
In October 2017 a Jack Nicklaus Designs Signature 18-hole golf course opened in Ashgabat. It features 82 sand traps and covers 70 hectares.[296][297][298][299][300][301][302]
Ashgabat was the host of the 2018 IWF World Weightlifting Championships and 2023 World Kurash Championships.[303]
The city's professional football clubs Altyn Asyr FK, FC Aşgabat and FK Köpetdag Aşgabat play in the Ýokary Liga, the top league of Turkmenistan.
Ashgabat is home to several professional ice hockey teams. Galkan, Merdana, Nesil, Shir, Oguzkhan, Watanchy play in the Turkmenistan Hockey Championship.[304][305] Ashgabat annually hosts the President of the Turkmeinistan Cup ice hockey tournament.[306] There are three ice arenas in Ashgabat: Winter Sports Complex Ashgabat (10,300 seats capacity), Ashgabat Ice Palace (1000 seats)[307] and Galkan Ice Palace (630 seats).[308]
Inha Babakova, 1999 World High Jump champion, was born in Ashgabat. Born in Ashgabat weightlifter Polina Guryeva captured Turkmenistan's first Olympic medal at the 2020 Summer Olympics, taking silver in the women's 59 kg.[309]
International relations
[edit]Diplomatic missions
[edit]The city hosts 32 foreign embassies[310] and serves as the headquarters for the International Fund for Saving the Aral Sea[311] and United Nations Regional Centre for Preventive Diplomacy for Central Asia (UNRCCA).[312]
Twin towns – sister cities
[edit]Ashgabat is twinned with:[313][314]
Aktau, Kazakhstan
Albuquerque, United States (1990)
Ankara, Turkey (1994)
Astana, Kazakhstan (2017)
Athens, Greece
Bamako, Mali (1974)
Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (2018)
Dushanbe, Tajikistan (2017)
Kyiv, Ukraine (2001)
Lanzhou, China (1992)
Tashkent, Uzbekistan (2017)
San Bartolomé de la Torre, Spain (2025)
Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia (2025)
Partner cities
[edit]Ashgabat cooperates with:[313]
See also
[edit]- Ashgabat Trauma Center
- Boroughs and landmarks of Ashgabat
- List of cities in Turkmenistan
- OpenStreetMap wiki article on geography of Ashgabat
- Russian Turkestan
Notes
[edit]- ^ /ˌɑːʃɡəˈbɑːt/ or /ˈɑːʃɡəbæt/;[6]
- ^ Turkmen: Aşgabat, [ɑʃɢɑˈbɑt];[7] Persian: عشقآباد, romanized: Ešqābād
- ^ The name was used from 1919 to 1927. Russian: Полтора́цк, IPA: [pəltɐˈratsk]
References
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External links
[edit]Ashgabat
View on GrokipediaAshgabat (Turkmen: Aşgabat) is the capital and largest city of Turkmenistan, located in the south-central part of the country at the northern edge of the Kopet Dag mountains and adjacent to the Karakum Desert, with coordinates approximately 37°58′N 58°20′E and an elevation of 219 meters.[1] The city, with a population of about 1.03 million as of the 2022 census, serves as the political, economic, and cultural center of the nation.[2] Renowned for its opulent white marble architecture, Ashgabat holds the Guinness World Record for the highest density of white marble-clad buildings, encompassing 543 structures covering 4.5 million square meters as recognized in 2013.[3][4] This extravagant urban development, initiated post-independence, features monumental structures and wide boulevards but reflects the centralized planning of Turkmenistan's leadership amid the country's isolationist policies and resource-driven economy.[5]
Etymology
Name Derivation and Historical Usage
The name Ashgabat derives primarily from Persian linguistic roots, combining eshq (or ishq, meaning "love") with ābād (denoting a "city," "settlement," or "prosperous place"), yielding a translation of "City of Love" or "Loved City."[5][6][7] This interpretation aligns with folk etymologies prevalent in Turkmen tradition, though some sources propose an alternative linkage to the Parthian ruler Arsaces, interpreting it as Ashk-ābād ("City of Arsaces"), reflecting pre-Islamic historical influences in the region.[8][9] A variant attributes it to Turkmenic elements like yşk ("love" or "desire") paired with abat ("prosperous" or "beautiful"), emphasizing local linguistic evolution.[10] Historically, the name emerged with the settlement's pre-Russian Turkmen origins, adopted by Russian forces in 1881 when establishing a fort near an existing village, transliterated as Askhabad or Ashkabad to evoke Persian connotations of destined greatness.[11] Following the 1917 Russian Revolution and Soviet recapture in 1918, it was briefly renamed Poltoratsk (or Poltorask) from 1919 to 1927, honoring local revolutionary figure P. Poltoratsk, before reverting to Ashkhabad in Russian usage.[7][6] Soviet administration standardized Ашхабад (Ashkhabad) from 1925 onward, retaining this form until Turkmenistan's independence in 1991, after which the native Turkmen orthography Aşgabat was officially adopted in 1992 to reflect phonetic accuracy and national identity.[12] Earlier variants like Ashgabad appear in 19th-century Russian accounts, underscoring transliteration inconsistencies across Persian, Turkic, and Cyrillic scripts.[7]Geography and Climate
Physical Location and Topography
Ashgabat is situated at approximately 37.95° N latitude and 58.38° E longitude in the Ahal Region of Turkmenistan, Central Asia.[13] The city lies roughly 50 kilometers north of the Iran-Turkmenistan border.[14] The urban area occupies an elevation of about 219 meters (719 feet) above sea level, primarily on a flat plain.[15] To the south, Ashgabat is positioned at the northern foothills of the Kopet Dag mountain range, which extends along the southern boundary of Turkmenistan and features rugged terrain with steep slopes rising to peaks exceeding 3,000 meters.[16] [17] Northward from the city, the landscape transitions into the expansive Karakum Desert, a subtropical sandy expanse covering approximately 80% of Turkmenistan's territory and characterized by dunes that gradually ascend toward the southern mountain barrier.[18] [17] This topographic setting places Ashgabat in a transitional zone between arid desert lowlands and montane elevations, influencing local drainage patterns and seismic activity due to proximity to tectonic features in the Kopet Dag.[19]Climate Characteristics
Ashgabat features a cold desert climate classified as BWk under the Köppen-Geiger system, with hot, arid summers and cold, relatively dry winters influenced by its location in the foothills of the Kopet Dag mountains and proximity to the Karakum Desert.[20] The annual mean temperature is approximately 16°C, with significant seasonal variation driven by continental air masses and limited moderating effects from nearby bodies of water.[21] Temperatures peak in July, averaging a high of 38.3°C and low of 23.8°C, while January sees averages of 8.6°C high and -0.4°C low, with frost common.[20] The hot season, from late May to mid-September, often exceeds 35°C during the day, with low humidity (around 34% in summer) contributing to discomfort despite minimal muggy conditions year-round.[13] Winters bring occasional snowfall, typically 5 days each in January and February, though accumulation is light due to the overall aridity.[20] Record highs have reached 47.2°C, as in June 2015, while lows can drop below -10°C in extreme cases, reflecting the climate's thermal extremes.[22] Precipitation totals about 201–227 mm annually, concentrated in the cooler months from January to April, with March and April being the wettest at 41 mm each.[20][21] Summers are nearly rainless, with June–September receiving under 5 mm monthly, resulting in around 90 rainy days per year but prolonged dry spells.[20] Winds average 6.5–8.3 mph, peaking in summer, and can carry dust from the surrounding desert, exacerbating aridity.[13]| Month | Avg. High (°C) | Avg. Low (°C) | Precip. (mm) | Rainy Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 8.6 | -0.4 | 24 | 7 |
| Jul | 38.3 | 23.8 | 3 | 2 |
| Annual | - | - | 201–227 | 90 |
Urban Layout Evolution
Ashgabat's urban layout originated in 1881 as a Russian military outpost, with planning centered on an old fortress and adjoining square from which radial streets extended, incorporating traditional Central Asian elements alongside colonial grid patterns. [23] This structure evolved through the early 20th century with additions like electricity and cinemas, but much of the city relied on vulnerable raw brick construction. [24] [25] The 1948 Ashgabat earthquake, measuring 7.3 on the moment magnitude scale and striking at 01:12 local time on October 6, devastated the city, destroying nearly all structures and necessitating total reconstruction. [5] [26] A master plan developed by Leningrad architects between 1949 and 1951 preserved the existing radial layout while expanding it with seismically resistant designs, emphasizing wide avenues and block-based residential areas built primarily from concrete and reinforced materials. [27] [28] In the 1960s and 1970s, Soviet-era master plans further modernized the layout, promoting Ashgabat as an economic and cultural hub with expanded infrastructure, including monumental public buildings in modernist styles that reinforced orthogonal street grids and green spaces. [29] Post-independence under President Saparmurat Niyazov from 1991, the city underwent radical transformation into a "white city" through large-scale construction of grandiose monuments and administrative complexes, shifting toward neoclassical facades and symbolic architecture centered on national identity. [30] This trend intensified under Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow from 2007, with expansive northern developments featuring white marble cladding on over 543 buildings covering 4.5 million square meters, earning a Guinness World Record for the highest density of such structures and resulting in low-density, vehicle-oriented urban expansion with monumental scales often exceeding practical needs. [31] [32] [33]History
Pre-Russian and Early Settlement
The area encompassing modern Ashgabat has evidence of human settlement dating to antiquity, with archaeological findings indicating occupation during the Parthian Empire (circa 247 BC–224 AD), near the ancient capital of Nisa approximately 15 km west. The specific site of Ashgabat hosted Konjikala, a settlement first documented as a wine-producing village along the Silk Road in the 1st–2nd century BC, which expanded into a trading hub due to its position between the Karakum Desert and Kopet Dag mountains.[10][11] Konjikala endured an earthquake in the 1st century BC but was rebuilt, prospering through medieval periods until its destruction during Mongol invasions in the 13th century AD, after which the site saw periods of abandonment and limited habitation.[34] Post-medieval decline shifted the region toward nomadic pastoralism dominated by Turkmen tribes, particularly the Ahal Teke, who maintained semi-permanent villages amid the arid landscape. By the early 19th century, the immediate vicinity featured small, autonomous Turkmen settlements under nominal suzerainty of the Qajar Persian Empire, with the village of Askhabad serving as a local center for the Teke confederation.[35][36] These communities engaged in agriculture, herding, and limited trade, relying on oases and seasonal water from the Tejen River, though frequent raids and environmental constraints kept populations sparse, estimated at a few thousand across nearby villages.[5] Recent excavations, including those uncovered during 2020 urban construction, have revealed artifacts and structures confirming pre-Islamic layers at the site, underscoring continuity from ancient urbanism to tribal villages despite gaps in records.[37] This pre-Russian era reflects the broader Central Asian pattern of resilient yet vulnerable foothill settlements, shaped by trade routes, invasions, and seismic activity rather than sustained state-building.[38]Russian Empire Period
Ashgabat was founded on December 13, 1881 (Old Style), as a Russian military fortress following the Russian Empire's victory over the Teke Turkmen tribe at the Battle of Geok Tepe earlier that year, which facilitated the conquest of the Ahal-Teke oasis region.[39] The site was selected near an existing Turkmen settlement known as Askabad, deriving its name from the Turkmen words aş (love) and kabad (wind), reflecting the local arid conditions.[40] Initially established as a forward base to secure Russian expansion southward against Persian and British influences, the fortress housed troops and served as a bulwark in the Transcaspian region.[41] By 1885, Ashgabat had evolved into the administrative capital of the Transcaspian Oblast, a province within Russian Turkestan that encompassed much of present-day Turkmenistan and parts of southwestern Kazakhstan.[42] Its strategic location on ancient caravan routes from Central Asia to Persia amplified its commercial significance, particularly after the completion of the Transcaspian Railway that year, which connected the city to Krasnovodsk (now Türkmenbaşy) on the Caspian Sea and facilitated trade and troop movements across the empire.[10] Russian settlers, including military personnel, administrators, and merchants, dominated the urban population, transforming Ashgabat into a predominantly European-style outpost with orthogonal street planning, brick buildings, and Orthodox churches amid the desert landscape.[43] The city's growth accelerated through the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with the population reaching approximately 20,000 by 1900, bolstered by influxes of Russian and Ukrainian colonists encouraged by imperial land policies.[19] Turkmen nomads were largely confined to outskirts or rural areas, while the urban core developed infrastructure like telegraph lines and schools oriented toward Russian imperial education.[44] Tensions simmered due to heavy taxation and land expropriations, culminating in Turkmen participation in the 1916 Central Asian revolt against Russian conscription and rule, with unrest spilling over from nearby Tejen and affecting Ashgabat's stability.[43] The period ended with the February Revolution of 1917, which dismantled imperial authority and initiated a brief provisional government before Bolshevik influence grew.[45]Soviet Era
Ashgabat, temporarily renamed Poltoratsk from 1919 to 1927, became the capital of the newly formed Turkmen Soviet Socialist Republic on May 13, 1925, following the restructuring of Central Asian territories under Soviet control.[36][46] As the administrative center, the city experienced Soviet modernization, including the establishment of educational institutions, theaters, and infrastructure projects aimed at promoting collectivization and industrialization, though it remained primarily an administrative rather than industrial hub.[10] On October 6, 1948 (local time), a magnitude 7.3 earthquake struck near Ashgabat at 1:12 a.m., lasting about 10 seconds and devastating the city, which was largely built with vulnerable raw brick and adobe structures.[47][48] The disaster caused an estimated 70,000 to 110,000 deaths, representing up to two-thirds of the city's population of around 300,000, with widespread collapse of buildings and limited preparedness exacerbating the toll.[49][50] Soviet authorities imposed strict censorship, underreporting casualties officially to as few as 110 while prohibiting information flow, a measure reflecting centralized control over disaster narratives.[50] Reconstruction efforts commenced immediately under direct oversight from Moscow, involving mass mobilization of labor and materials to rebuild with reinforced concrete and Soviet architectural standards, including multi-story residential blocks and public facilities.[28][50] By the early 1950s, much of the city had been restored, transforming Ashgabat into a more urbanized Soviet-style settlement, though critiques noted inefficiencies in long-term planning and resource allocation.[50] Throughout the remainder of the Soviet period, Ashgabat functioned as the political and cultural nucleus of the Turkmen SSR, hosting key party institutions and benefiting from gradual infrastructure expansions tied to broader union-wide development policies.[51]Post-Independence Developments
Turkmenistan declared independence from the Soviet Union on October 27, 1991, with Ashgabat serving as the capital of the new republic.[52] Under President Saparmurat Niyazov, who governed from independence until his death on December 21, 2006, Ashgabat experienced extensive urban redevelopment characterized by grandiose architectural projects.[53] Niyazov's "White City" initiative prioritized monumental structures sheathed in white marble, including the Independence Monument erected in a 345-acre central park to symbolize national sovereignty.[41] These efforts transformed the city's skyline, emphasizing opulent designs amid Turkmenistan's policy of permanent neutrality declared in 1995.[54] The scale of construction escalated, leading to Ashgabat holding the Guinness World Record for the highest density of white marble-clad buildings, with 543 structures covering 4.5 million square meters as certified on March 25, 2013.[55][3] This record stemmed from ongoing projects initiated under Niyazov and continued by his successor, Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow, who assumed power in 2007.[53] Berdimuhamedow expanded urban development, launching the "Ashgabat City" residential complex in the northern part of the capital, encompassing 744 hectares and over 240 buildings designed as a modern "smart city" district.[56] These initiatives focused on high-rise apartments, infrastructure, and aesthetic enhancements, though they occurred within a context of limited economic diversification and state-controlled resource allocation from natural gas revenues.[57] Post-2006 developments under Berdimuhamedow included modernization of southern Ashgabat districts, with upgrades to lighting, landscaping, and public facilities in preparation for national anniversaries.[58] The emphasis on marble facades and monumental scale persisted, reinforcing Ashgabat's role as a showcase of regime priorities, despite reports of underutilized spaces and restricted public access in some areas.[4] By 2022, when Berdimuhamedow transitioned power to his son Serdar, the city's built environment reflected over three decades of authoritarian-driven expansion, prioritizing visual splendor over broader socioeconomic integration.[53]Government and Politics
Administrative Structure
Ashgabat possesses the administrative status of a welayat (province)-equivalent entity, distinct from the encircling Ahal Welayaty, functioning as Turkmenistan's capital with autonomous provincial-level governance. The city is partitioned into four primary etraplar (districts or boroughs): Bagtyyarlyk etrapy, Berkararlyk etrapy, Kopetdag etrapy, and Buzmein etrapy. Each etrap is led by a hakimlik (administration) under a hakim, appointed directly by the President of Turkmenistan, who oversees local executive functions including urban planning, public services, and enforcement of national policies.[59][60] This quadripartite division, formalized in early 2018, amalgamated and reconfigured antecedent districts to streamline municipal administration amid rapid urban expansion and centralized directive. The hakims report to the presidential apparatus, ensuring alignment with national priorities such as infrastructure development and security, while subordinate gengeshliks (rural or neighborhood councils) manage grassroots affairs within etrap boundaries. No elected local bodies exist independently; authority remains hierarchical and presidentially derived, characteristic of Turkmenistan's unitary state framework.[59][61]Role of Central Authority
The central authority of Turkmenistan, embodied in the presidency, exercises near-total dominance over Ashgabat's governance as the national capital and seat of executive power. The President, functioning as both head of state and head of government without a separate prime minister, appoints the city's häkim (governor), who oversees municipal administration and enforces national policies without independent authority.[62][63] This appointment mechanism ensures that local decisions in Ashgabat align strictly with presidential directives, extending to the selection of deputy häkims and district heads, as demonstrated by decrees issued in 2009 and 2024.[64] This structure reflects Turkmenistan's broader authoritarian framework, where the executive controls the legislature, judiciary, and security apparatus, fostering centralized state control that originates and is most visibly implemented in Ashgabat.[65] Key institutions such as ministries and the parliament (Mejlis) are headquartered in the capital, channeling policy formulation and enforcement under presidential oversight, with no provision for local elections or autonomous budgeting.[66] The current president, Serdar Berdimuhamedow, who assumed office in 2022, continues this model, though his father Gurbanguly retains significant influence through bodies like the People's Council, further entrenching top-down rule.[67] In practice, this centralization manifests in rigorous mechanisms for political stability, including surveillance, media censorship, and suppression of dissent, all coordinated from Ashgabat to prevent challenges to the regime.[68] Independent assessments describe the system as one of the world's most restrictive, with civil liberties curtailed to maintain regime control, though official sources portray it as a presidential republic emphasizing national unity.[66][59]Political Stability and Control Mechanisms
Turkmenistan's political stability, centered in Ashgabat as the national capital, derives primarily from an entrenched authoritarian system characterized by centralized executive dominance and systematic suppression of dissent, rather than broad institutional pluralism or public accountability.[66] The regime, led by President Serdar Berdimuhamedow since 2022 following his father Gurbanguly's tenure, maintains continuity through dynastic succession, with the elder Berdimuhamedow retaining significant influence as "Arkadag" (Protector).[69] This structure has precluded major internal upheavals, as evidenced by the absence of recorded protests or electoral challenges in Ashgabat since independence in 1991, attributable to pervasive fear and coercion rather than organic legitimacy.[70] External alliances, particularly with Russia and China, further bolster regime resilience by providing economic and security support amid internal isolation.[71] Control mechanisms in Ashgabat, as the seat of government, encompass a robust security apparatus including the Ministry of National Security, which functions as a de facto secret police entity responsible for monitoring, arbitrary detention, and enforced disappearances of perceived threats.[72] Reports document routine use of torture and degrading treatment by officials to extract compliance, with Ashgabat's detention facilities implicated in such practices.[73] The legislature serves as a rubber-stamp body, approving executive decrees without debate, while opposition parties are nominally permitted but effectively barred from activity through registration denials and leader imprisonments.[74] Surveillance extends digitally and physically, with Ashgabat residents subjected to internet censorship blocking foreign media and social platforms, alongside state-monopolized telecommunications enabling cyber monitoring of communications.[75] Authorities deploy spyware and informant networks to track citizens at home and abroad, targeting expatriates and bloggers critical of the regime, as seen in cases of transnational harassment reported in 2024.[76] Freedom of expression is curtailed via criminal penalties for "insulting the president," enforced through media control where all outlets propagate regime narratives exclusively.[77] Religious and civil society groups face infiltration and dissolution, with independent human rights monitoring impossible due to reprisals.[78] These mechanisms ensure short-term stability but foster underlying fragility, as economic hardships and passport denials—arbitrarily applied to restrict mobility—exacerbate resentment without outlets for expression.[79] International assessments rank Turkmenistan among the least free states globally, with Ashgabat exemplifying the fusion of state power and personalist rule that prioritizes regime preservation over governance reform.[80][66]Demographics
Population Trends and Census Data
The population of Ashgabat, as recorded in Turkmenistan's 2022 Population and Housing Census conducted by the State Committee of Statistics, stood at 1,030,063 residents, accounting for 14.6% of the national total of 7,057,841. This census, the first comprehensive nationwide count since 1995, covered the city's administrative area of 9.8 square kilometers, resulting in a population density of 105,108 persons per square kilometer.[81][82][83] Historical trends reflect steady urban expansion, particularly after the devastating 1948 earthquake that reduced the city to rubble and killed tens of thousands. Pre-earthquake estimates placed the population near 170,000 in the 1940s, but post-reconstruction Soviet-era growth accelerated due to industrialization and central planning. By 1950, the figure had recovered to approximately 149,416, rising through the late Soviet period amid resource-driven migration.[84][85] Post-independence data show continued increases, with United Nations estimates at 746,000 for the capital in 2015, driven by internal rural-to-urban migration despite restrictive residency policies (propiska system) limiting access to the capital. The jump to 1,030,063 by 2022 implies an average annual growth rate of about 2.8% in the preceding period, attributed officially to natural increase and administrative expansions, though independent projections like those estimating 902,000 for 2023 suggest possible overstatement in state figures due to centralized data control.[82][85]Ethnic and Linguistic Composition
Ashgabat's population is predominantly ethnic Turkmen, comprising 89.86% or 925,656 individuals according to the 2022 census conducted by Turkmenistan's State Committee of Statistics.[86] Russians form the largest minority at 6.62% (68,188 people), followed by Azerbaijanis (1.0%, 10,376), Armenians (0.95%, 9,761), and Uzbeks (0.5%, 5,179), with the remainder consisting of smaller groups such as Kazakhs, Tatars, and others.[86] This composition reflects post-independence policies promoting Turkmen settlement in the capital while minorities, particularly Russians, have declined due to emigration since the 1990s amid economic pressures and cultural Turkicization efforts. Linguistically, Turkmen serves as the dominant language, aligning with the ethnic majority and functioning as the official state language since independence in 1991.[87] Russian persists as a widely used second language in Ashgabat, especially in urban commerce, education, and among the Russian minority, though its prevalence has waned with demographic shifts; nationally, it is spoken by about 12% as a first language but remains a lingua franca in the capital.[87] Minority languages like Uzbek and Armenian are spoken by their respective communities but lack official status and are less prominent in public life.[87] The 2022 census data on mother tongues corroborates this, showing Turkmen as the primary tongue for over 90% of Ashgabat residents, underscoring the city's homogenization under centralized governance.[86]Economy
Economic Overview and Resource Dependence
Ashgabat serves as the administrative and political center of Turkmenistan, with its economy dominated by government services, public administration, and construction activities tied to state-led urban development projects. Local economic activities include trade, light manufacturing such as textiles and food processing, and retail services, but these sectors remain underdeveloped relative to the national scale. The city's GDP contribution is not separately tracked, but as the capital, it benefits disproportionately from central government expenditures funded by hydrocarbon revenues.[88][89] Turkmenistan's overall economy, which underpins Ashgabat's prosperity, exhibits extreme resource dependence, with hydrocarbons—primarily natural gas—accounting for approximately 89% of exports and up to 90% of public revenues. Natural gas exports, directed mainly to China via pipeline, constitute the bulk of foreign exchange earnings and have driven reported GDP growth rates, such as the hydrocarbon production boosts observed in 2024. In Ashgabat, this manifests in subsidized utilities, generous public sector wages, and lavish infrastructure investments, including marble-clad buildings and monuments, which symbolize the regime's distribution of resource rents to the urban elite and administrative class.[90][91][92] This dependence exposes Ashgabat's economy to volatility from global energy prices and limited diversification efforts, as non-hydrocarbon sectors like agriculture and manufacturing contribute minimally to output despite state rhetoric on textiles and chemicals. The absence of a robust private sector, coupled with state control over key industries, hinders local entrepreneurship in the capital, where foreign investment is minimal outside energy-related ventures. Economic performance in 2024 showed a budget surplus of 0.8% of GDP, sustained by gas sales, but underlying vulnerabilities persist due to reliance on a single commodity and buyer.[89][93][94]Key Industries and Infrastructure Projects
The economy of Ashgabat, as Turkmenistan's capital, aligns closely with the national reliance on hydrocarbons, where natural gas extraction and export dominate, accounting for the majority of GDP and foreign exchange earnings. Ashgabat functions as the central administrative and conferencing hub for the oil and gas sector, hosting the annual Oil and Gas of Turkmenistan (OGT) exhibition and conference, which in 2025 marked its 30th iteration and drew international participants to discuss production, pipelines, and energy partnerships.[95] [96] In 2024, Turkmenistan produced 77.62 billion cubic meters of natural gas and 8.28 million tons of oil, with Ashgabat overseeing policy and investment coordination for upstream and downstream activities, including petrochemical development.[97] Construction stands out as a key local industry, propelled by state-directed urban expansion and monumental projects that have transformed Ashgabat's skyline since the mid-1990s. This sector benefits from substantial government investments in residential complexes, public facilities, and commercial structures, often involving foreign contractors from Turkey, France, and South Korea, and has contributed to national construction growth rates of 7% in the first nine months of 2025.[98] [99] Petrochemical and chemical processing also play roles, with recent initiatives like Daewoo Engineering & Construction's $1 billion-plus mineral fertilizer plant underscoring diversification efforts tied to gas feedstocks, though primary refining occurs elsewhere.[100] Infrastructure projects emphasize transportation, energy, and social facilities to support urban growth and regional connectivity. Transport upgrades include expanded highways, bridges, overpasses, and multi-level interchanges, alongside plans for a metro system projected for completion by 2035 to mitigate rising vehicle numbers and congestion.[101] [102] In the energy domain, a 1,574 MW gas turbine power plant under construction by Turkey's Çalık Holding enhances local supply, complementing national grid reinforcements that added 1,400 km of transmission lines and 11 substations since 2018.[103] [104] Health infrastructure advancements feature the 2025 approval of a new Ashgabat Nursing School with modern equipment, funded by the Asian Development Bank to bolster medical training capacity.[105] These initiatives, largely state-financed, prioritize earthquake-resistant designs and aesthetic uniformity, though they draw scrutiny for resource allocation amid hydrocarbon dependency.[106]Economic Challenges and Criticisms
Despite its role as Turkmenistan's economic and administrative center, Ashgabat faces significant challenges stemming from the country's heavy reliance on natural gas exports, which account for over 90% of public revenue and expose the urban economy to global price volatility.[107] This resource dependence has led to boom-and-bust cycles, with a deep recession following the 2014 collapse in energy prices exacerbating vulnerabilities in non-hydrocarbon sectors like services and construction, which dominate local employment in the capital.[89] Independent assessments highlight a lack of economic diversification, stifled private enterprise due to near-total state control, and restricted foreign direct investment, rendering Ashgabat's growth precarious amid fluctuating export revenues to markets like China and Russia.[108][109] Poverty and unemployment persist in Ashgabat despite official narratives of prosperity, with municipal service workers in the city going unpaid for two months in July 2024, straining household finances and underscoring delays in wage disbursements across public sectors.[79] Reports indicate widespread food shortages, high inflation eroding purchasing power, and limited access to bank accounts for ordinary residents, contributing to an urban underclass amid the capital's monumental infrastructure projects.[66][110] While official unemployment stood at around 2.8% projected for 2025, analysts cite underreporting and structural barriers like patronage networks and low wages as drivers of hidden joblessness and emigration from Ashgabat.[111] These issues are compounded by a water crisis, with overuse in agriculture and urban development threatening industrial output and living standards in the arid capital region.[112] Criticisms of Ashgabat's economic management center on systemic corruption, forced labor practices, and opaque governance that prioritize elite enrichment over public welfare.[113] State-controlled imports, such as food staples, have enabled profiteering by relatives of ruling figures, exacerbating shortages while official media downplays crises.[114] International observers note patronage-driven allocation of resources favors Ashgabat's facade of grandeur—funded by gas rents—over equitable development, fostering inequality and repression of dissent over economic grievances.[115][110] The Heritage Foundation classifies Turkmenistan's economy as "repressed," attributing stagnation to absent structural reforms and fiscal opacity, which hinder sustainable growth in the capital.[109] These factors, per reports from organizations like the Bertelsmann Stiftung, perpetuate a cycle where hydrocarbon windfalls mask underlying inefficiencies rather than addressing root causes like overregulation and lack of transparency.[66]Architecture and Urban Development
Historical Architectural Phases
Ashgabat was established in 1881 as a Russian imperial fortress named Askabad on the site of the earlier Turkmen settlement of Konjikala, which had been destroyed by an earthquake in 1853, serving primarily as a military outpost to counter Persian influence and secure Transcaspian routes.[41][19] Early architecture reflected Russian colonial priorities, featuring utilitarian fortification walls, barracks, administrative offices, and residential quarters in a mix of neoclassical and eclectic styles typical of Tsarist expansions in Central Asia, with adobe and fired brick construction dominating due to local materials.[11] By the early 20th century, the city expanded to include rail-linked bazaars and European-style public buildings, though much of this pre-Soviet fabric remained modest and earthquake-vulnerable.[116] Soviet control solidified in December 1917, ushering in initial constructivist influences during the 1920s-1930s, but these were largely obliterated by the devastating 7.3-magnitude earthquake on October 5, 1948, which destroyed over 90% of the city's adobe and brick structures, killing up to 110,000 people and leaving only a handful of reinforced buildings intact.[25] Reconstruction began immediately under Joseph Stalin's directive, prioritizing seismic-resistant designs; the 1949-1951 master plan, developed by Leningrad architects, emphasized wide boulevards, low-rise housing, and monumental public edifices in the Stalinist Empire style—characterized by ornate facades, columns, and socialist realist motifs symbolizing state power.[27][117] These efforts restored administrative centers and apartments using concrete and steel, though full recovery extended into the 1950s amid material shortages.[28] From the 1960s onward, under chief architect Abdulla Ahmedov (serving 1961-1987), Ashgabat transitioned to Soviet modernism, favoring functionalist brutalist and modernist forms with clean lines, prefabricated panels, and integration of local motifs like geometric patterns inspired by Turkmen carpets.[29][118] Notable examples include the Karl Marx State Republican Library (1970s), featuring innovative courtyard designs and elevated structures for seismic safety, reflecting a shift toward mass housing and cultural institutions amid Khrushchev-era de-Stalinization.[119] This phase prioritized utility over ornamentation, producing mid-rise complexes that accommodated population growth to over 400,000 by the 1980s, though many retained earthquake-prone vulnerabilities due to enforced standardization.[120] By Turkmenistan's independence in 1991, surviving pre-1991 architecture—primarily post-1948 Soviet stock—contrasted sharply with later developments, underscoring a legacy of resilience amid repeated seismic threats and ideological shifts.[117]Post-1991 Monumental Style
Following Turkmenistan's independence from the Soviet Union on October 27, 1991, Ashgabat's urban landscape shifted toward a distinctive monumental style under the leadership of President Saparmurat Niyazov, who envisioned the capital as a "White City" symbolizing national rebirth and prosperity. This approach emphasized expansive public spaces, grandiose structures, and uniform white marble cladding, drawing on post-Soviet nationalism while incorporating eclectic elements of neoclassicism, Soviet monumentalism, and Turkmen motifs such as carpet patterns and ancient fortress designs. The style prioritized visual spectacle over functionality, with buildings often featuring oversized columns, arches, and domes coated in imported Italian marble to evoke purity and permanence.[53][41] By 2013, this development culminated in Ashgabat receiving the Guinness World Record for the highest density of white marble-clad buildings, encompassing 543 structures across 4.5 million square meters of marble facade—equivalent to one square meter of marble per 4.87 square meters of urban land. The initiative, funded primarily through natural gas export revenues, accelerated in the early 2000s, transforming Soviet-era blocks into a cohesive aesthetic of gleaming white edifices aligned along broad avenues like Garashsyzlyk Avenue. Under Niyazov's successor, Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow, who assumed power in 2007, the style persisted and expanded, incorporating additional records such as the largest architectural star and bird-shaped building, reinforcing themes of state stability and leader veneration through integrated monuments and naming conventions.[4][3][121] Critiques from independent observers highlight the style's causal ties to authoritarian consolidation, where architectural excess served to project power amid limited civic participation, resulting in underutilized spaces despite the scale—Ashgabat's core features vast plazas and fountains that remain sparsely populated due to the city's estimated 1 million residents concentrated in non-monumental districts. State narratives frame the marble proliferation as a marker of cultural revival, yet reports from outlets like Radio Free Europe note discrepancies in maintenance and economic prioritization, with resources diverted from infrastructure amid Turkmenistan's closed political system. This monumentalism, while visually imposing, underscores a divergence from practical urban planning, prioritizing symbolic capital over sustainable development.[32][122]Notable Structures and Monuments
The Independence Monument, completed in 2001, commemorates Turkmenistan's 1991 separation from the Soviet Union and stands as a central symbol of national sovereignty in Ashgabat.[123][124] This 118-meter-tall white marble structure features a gilded flame atop a spire, surrounded by 27 statues representing historical Turkmen figures and a relief frieze depicting the independence struggle.[125] It is located in Independence Park on the city's southern outskirts, encompassing fountains, gardens, and additional memorials that emphasize themes of resilience and self-determination.[123] The Arch of Neutrality, erected in 1998, embodies Turkmenistan's policy of permanent neutrality, formally recognized by the United Nations in 1995.[126] Originally positioned centrally in Ashgabat at 75 meters high with three legs supporting a rotating golden statue of former President Saparmurat Niyazov that tracked the sun, the monument was relocated to the city's outskirts in 2011 due to urban expansion.[127] The tripod design, locally dubbed "The Tripod," features inscriptions of the neutrality declaration and guards symbolizing vigilance.[128] The Giant Ruhnama Monument, installed in Independence Park, honors the Ruhnama, a spiritual guide authored by Niyazov in 2001 and 2004, which was mandated as required reading in schools and for citizenship oaths until his death in 2006.[129] This 6-meter-tall mechanized bronze sculpture depicts the book opening at specific times—5 a.m. and 10 p.m.—to reveal illuminated pages with key excerpts, reflecting the text's role in shaping national ideology during Niyazov's rule.[130] Türkmenbaşy Ruhy Mosque, situated 11 kilometers west of Ashgabat in Gypjak—Niyazov's birthplace—opened in 2004 as Central Asia's largest mosque, spanning 18,000 square meters with capacity for 10,000 worshippers.[131] Constructed from white marble with a central dome and four minarets, its interior and exterior bear verses from the Ruhnama alongside Quranic inscriptions, blending Islamic architecture with state-sponsored ideology.[132] The complex includes Niyazov's mausoleum, underscoring its ties to the former leader's legacy.[133] The Wedding Palace, known as Bagt Köşgi ("Palace of Happiness"), was completed in 2011 as an 11-story civil registry facility shaped like a star with a massive spherical orb atop a cubic base, facilitating up to seven simultaneous weddings.[134] Covering over 38,000 square meters, it includes multiple ceremony halls, banquet rooms, shops, and administrative offices, exemplifying the post-Soviet era's grandiose public architecture in Ashgabat.[135] The Saparmurat Türkmenbaşy Olympic Stadium, part of the Ashgabat Olympic Complex opened in 2017, serves as the national football venue with a 35,000-seat capacity and features a distinctive horse-head facade symbolizing Turkmen equestrian heritage. Hosted the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, the complex spans 1.4 million square meters, incorporating arenas for various sports amid the city's emphasis on monumental infrastructure projects.[136]Architectural Controversies and Sustainability Issues
The proliferation of white marble-clad buildings in Ashgabat, decreed by former president Saparmurat Niyazov to create a "White City," has faced criticism for emphasizing monumental aesthetics at the expense of functionality and economic reality, with many structures left empty or underoccupied despite widespread poverty in Turkmenistan.[53] This has earned the city Guinness World Records, including the highest concentration of such buildings as of 2013, but observers describe it as an "absurd" showcase of leader-driven extravagance rather than public need.[32][137] Sustainability challenges compound these issues, as rapid post-1991 construction has driven resource overuse, waste accumulation, air and water pollution, and elevated greenhouse gas emissions, straining the desert environment.[57] White marble facades reflect intense solar heat, intensifying urban temperatures and cooling demands in an arid climate, while maintenance requires substantial water amid regional shortages.[138] Continuous lighting of unoccupied edifices further inflates energy consumption, highlighting inefficiencies in a nation reliant on gas exports yet facing domestic infrastructure gaps.[139] Seismic vulnerabilities persist despite the 1948 Ashgabat earthquake, which killed up to 110,000 and razed adobe-dominated structures; contemporary buildings often exhibit subpar resistance quality, prompting international assessments to map hazards and retrofit risks.[140][141] A 2025 UNDP initiative developed GIS platforms for the first time to evaluate Ashgabat's seismic threats, revealing needs for enhanced engineering to avert repeats of historical devastation.[142]Infrastructure
Transportation Networks
Ashgabat International Airport, situated 10 kilometers northwest of the city center, serves as the primary gateway for air travel to the capital, accommodating domestic and limited international flights operated by Turkmenistan Airlines and select foreign carriers. The facility, reconstructed and expanded between 2013 and 2016, spans 1,200 hectares and boasts a passenger capacity of up to 14 million annually, positioning it as Central Asia's largest airport by design, though actual throughput remains far lower due to restricted international connectivity and domestic demand.[143][144][145] Rail connectivity centers on Ashgabat railway station, the main terminus of the state-owned Türkmendemirýollary network, which totals nearly 5,000 kilometers nationwide and links the capital to key regional centers via the Trans-Caspian line. Daily services include fast and slow trains to Mary (8-12 hours) and Turkmenabat (14-17 hours), with additional routes to Balkanabat and Dashoguz; the network originated with the Krasnovodsk-Ashgabat line completed in 1885.[146][147] Road networks feature expansive highways radiating from Ashgabat, including the flagship 600-kilometer Ashgabat-Turkmenabat motorway under construction since 2019 to facilitate east-west cargo and passenger flows, with the 109-kilometer Tejen-Mary section inaugurated in April 2024 and further segments like Mary-Turkmenabat advancing as of early 2025. These routes adhere to modern standards but serve a sparsely populated country, emphasizing overland links to neighbors like Iran and Afghanistan amid broader Central Asian corridor ambitions.[148][149] Intra-city mobility relies on buses and taxis, as no subway or light rail system operates. Public buses traverse designated routes, boarded by signaling at stops with fares of approximately 0.50 manat payable in cash or via cards, supplemented by readily available shared taxis (often unlicensed) for short trips; private vehicles are common among residents but regulated under strict national policies limiting imports and fuel access.[150][151]Telecommunications and Media
Turkmentelecom, the state-owned telecommunications company headquartered in Ashgabat, serves as the primary provider of fixed-line telephone, internet, and email services across Turkmenistan, with a subsidiary handling mobile operations.[152] Altyn Asyr and TMCELL operate as the main mobile network providers, offering prepaid plans and coverage primarily concentrated in urban areas like Ashgabat.[153] The Ashgabat City Telephone Network provides local telephony, CDMA, and IPTV services to subscribers in the capital. Recent infrastructure upgrades, including Huawei-supported GPON installations and explorations of 5G deployment, aim to enhance digital connectivity, particularly in Ashgabat and the Avaza tourist zone.[154][155][156] Internet access in Ashgabat remains limited and expensive, with Turkmenistan recording the world's slowest average speeds and low penetration rates due to state monopoly and high costs.[157][75] The government, through the Ministry of National Security, enforces extensive censorship, blocking access to platforms such as YouTube, X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, and VPN services, while restricting over 122,000 domains across protocols.[158][159] Authorities monitor usage and arrest individuals for employing VPNs to bypass blocks, maintaining a tightly controlled digital environment that prioritizes surveillance over open access.[157][160] The media landscape in Turkmenistan, centered in Ashgabat, features absolute state control over all outlets, including newspapers, radio, television, and online platforms, with no independent journalism permitted.[77][161] State media propagate government narratives, censoring negative economic or social reports and blocking foreign news sources, fostering a parallel reality disconnected from global information flows.[162][163] Reporters Without Borders ranks Turkmenistan near the bottom globally for press freedom, citing the regime's monopoly on printing, broadcasting, and content distribution as tools for suppressing dissent.[77][164]Energy and Utilities
Ashgabat's electricity supply relies predominantly on natural gas-fired power generation, reflecting Turkmenistan's vast hydrocarbon reserves. The Ashgabat Power Plant, a 254-megawatt facility located in the Ahal Region adjacent to the city, serves as a key local source, contributing to the capital's power needs within the national grid.[165] Turkmenistan generates nearly all of its electricity from fossil fuels, with minimal renewable integration, and Ashgabat benefits from the country's unified transmission system, which includes ongoing expansions like a ring grid to enhance reliability.[166] [167] Residents receive free electricity up to an annual quota of 35 kilowatt-hours per person until at least 2030, a policy extended nationwide including the capital, though actual consumption patterns and grid losses remain opaque due to state control over data.[168] Natural gas dominates the energy sector, with Turkmenistan's production exceeding domestic demand and enabling subsidized supplies to Ashgabat households and industries. The state-owned Turkmengas monopoly handles distribution, providing free gas quotas—up to 6,400 cubic meters per household annually—covering heating, cooking, and power generation inputs.[168] Excess gas from fields like Galkynysh supports exports, indirectly bolstering the capital's infrastructure stability, though reliance on pipelines exposes the system to geopolitical risks.[169] Water utilities in Ashgabat are managed through a centralized system featuring three treatment plants and six intakes, with the primary Yanbash facility equipped for modern filtration and distribution to urban users. The city maintains a continuous supply of treated drinking water, processed at capacities up to 150,000 cubic meters daily from sources including the Karakum Canal, though the network lacks separation for potable versus non-potable uses, raising efficiency concerns.[170] [171] Free water provision mirrors energy subsidies, limited to quotas like 50 cubic meters monthly per capita, amid national challenges from aging Soviet-era pipes and arid conditions that strain overall infrastructure despite local prioritization.[168] [172] Modernization efforts, including international loans for grid and pipeline upgrades, aim to address leakages estimated at 30-50% in urban networks, but implementation lags due to funding gaps requiring billions in investment.[173] [174]Society
Education and Scientific Institutions
Ashgabat serves as the hub for Turkmenistan's higher education, hosting the majority of the country's universities and institutes. Magtymguly Turkmen State University, established in 1951 as the Turkmen State University, is the leading institution, offering programs in humanities, sciences, and pedagogy to thousands of students annually.[175] Other prominent universities in the city include the Turkmen State Institute of Economics and Management, focused on business and finance; Oguz Han Engineering and Technologies University, specializing in technical fields; and the Institute of International Relations of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, training diplomats.[176] These institutions, numbering over a dozen in Ashgabat, emphasize state-approved curricula aligned with national priorities, with nationwide higher education enrollment supported by annual admissions exceeding 27,500 students into universities and secondary vocational programs as planned for the 2025-2026 academic year.[177] Primary and secondary education in Ashgabat follows a compulsory 11-year system, with general education schools maintaining high attendance and completion rates mirroring national figures of 99% for primary and 97-99% for secondary levels, as reported in 2021 surveys.[178] Class sizes are regulated to average 25 students, and specialized secondary schools affiliated with ministries provide targeted training in sectors like agriculture and industry.[179] International options, such as the Ashgabat International School, cater to expatriate communities with an American-accredited curriculum from pre-K to grade 12, enrolling around 285 students as of 2023.[180] Scientific research in Ashgabat is coordinated by the Academy of Sciences of Turkmenistan, re-established in 2009 under presidential oversight after a period of restructuring. The academy oversees approximately 26 research institutes and associated entities, including those for seismology, atmospheric physics, chemistry, history, and archaeology, conducting fundamental and applied studies in priority national areas.[181] Additional sectoral research occurs through 14 ministry-affiliated institutes and university-based centers, though output is constrained by centralized control and limited global integration.[182] The International Scientific-Technological Park, linked to the academy, supports innovation in fields like biotechnology and engineering.[183]Healthcare System
Turkmenistan's healthcare system, which encompasses services in Ashgabat, is centralized and state-funded, providing free universal access to citizens through government revenues, though private options exist for foreigners and select services.[184] As the national capital, Ashgabat concentrates the country's advanced medical infrastructure, including specialized hospitals for cardiology, dermatology-venereology, emergency care, ophthalmology, and maternity, with facilities like the Central Cardiology Clinics at 192 Niyazov Avenue and the Dermato-Venereology Hospital in Choganly district.[185] Key institutions include the Central Hospital of Ashgabat, Ashgabat City Hospital—a state-run facility offering general and specialized inpatient care—and the affiliated hospital of Turkmenistan State Medical University, which supports training and research alongside clinical services.[186][187] Nationally, Turkmenistan maintains approximately 4.10 hospital beds per 1,000 inhabitants as of projections for 2025, with Ashgabat's urban hospitals handling secondary and tertiary care while rural areas rely on primary facilities; however, inpatient capacity has declined since the 1990s, reflecting policy shifts toward specialized urban centers.[188][189] Official reports emphasize modernization, positioning Ashgabat as a hub for high-technology clinics equipped for diagnostics and treatment, supported by state investments in equipment and personnel training.[190][191] In 2023, construction commenced on a 500-bed multidisciplinary hospital in Ashgabat to address capacity needs, alongside similar projects elsewhere, amid efforts to integrate digital tools like UNICEF-supported apps for maternal and child health monitoring.[192][193] Despite these developments, independent assessments highlight persistent challenges in Ashgabat's facilities, including shortages of essential medicines, supplies, and modern equipment, with overall care quality lagging behind global standards and often requiring patients to procure items privately.[185][194] The system's opacity, characterized by limited public data on disease prevalence and outcomes—such as underreporting of communicable diseases like tuberculosis and HIV—complicates evaluations, though international partners like WHO and UNDP assist with non-communicable disease management and "One Health" coordination established in 2024 to link human, animal, and environmental health sectors.[195][196][197] Access for expatriates typically involves cash payments or evacuation to neighboring countries for complex procedures, underscoring disparities between official claims of progress and practical limitations.[184][185]Cultural Institutions and Practices
Ashgabat hosts several state-managed museums dedicated to preserving Turkmen heritage, including the National Museum of History, which displays artifacts spanning prehistory to modern times with some English annotations. The Turkmen Museum of Fine Arts, established in 2005, features a collection of national artistic works in a distinctive architectural setting. The Turkmen Carpet Museum showcases traditional weaving techniques central to Turkmen identity, with exhibits highlighting intricate patterns and historical significance. These institutions, numbering around 36 state museums nationwide with many concentrated in the capital, emphasize ethnographic and independence-era narratives under government oversight.[198][199][198][200] Performing arts in Ashgabat are supported by six state theaters, alongside a national circus and film centers, fostering theatrical and musical productions that align with official cultural promotion. Events such as the 2022 "Turkmen Theatrical Art" festival, organized under presidential patronage, feature local performances drawing on folk traditions. Libraries, including the National Library of Turkmenistan, maintain extensive collections of Turkmen manuscripts and Silk Road-era documents, serving as repositories for literary heritage amid state-directed preservation efforts.[200][201][202] Cultural practices in Ashgabat blend nomadic legacies with state-endorsed traditions, such as oral poetry composition, which transitioned to printed forms after literacy expanded in urban centers. Music employs instruments like the two-stringed dutar and three-stringed gopuz during communal gatherings, while carpet weaving remains a revered craft symbolizing tribal motifs and familial continuity. Festivals promote folk dances and attire, including men's sheepskin hats and women's embroidered robes, often integrated into national holidays like Nowruz. Tea-drinking rituals, involving green tea served in small bowls, underscore hospitality norms persisting in daily social interactions. State policies prioritize these elements through sponsored events, though expression is channeled via official channels to reinforce national unity and heritage.[203][204][205][206]Main Sights and Landmarks
Parks, Memorials, and Complexes
The National Independence Park, spanning approximately 345 acres in central Ashgabat, serves as a prominent green space featuring the Independence Monument.[41] Completed in 2001, the monument stands 118 meters tall, crowned by a crescent moon and five stars symbolizing the unity of Turkmenistan's five major tribes, and commemorates the country's independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.[207] [125] The surrounding park includes fountains, statues of national heroes, and pathways, embodying post-Soviet national identity under President Saparmurat Niyazov's leadership.[208] The Halk Hakydasy Memorial Complex, known as "People's Memory," covers about 160 acres on a hill overlooking Ashgabat and opened on October 6, 2014, coinciding with Turkmenistan's Memorial Day.[209] [210] It honors victims of the 1881 Battle of Geok Tepe against Russian forces, World War II casualties, and the 1948 Ashgabat earthquake that killed an estimated 110,000 people.[211] Key features include the Ruhy Tagzym monument, a WWII eternal flame with kneeling soldier statues, and expansive park grounds offering panoramic city views toward the Kopet Dag mountains.[212] [125] Other notable parks include Ashgabat Park, one of the city's oldest central green areas established in the Soviet era, and Yenish Park (also called Victory Park), a large recreational space equipped for sports activities like running tracks and fitness areas.[213] Memorial elements extend to the nearby Earthquake Monument within related complexes, depicting a bull supporting the Earth to symbolize resilience against the 1948 disaster.[214] These sites reflect Turkmenistan's emphasis on monumental architecture and historical remembrance amid limited public access and state-controlled narratives.[123]Religious Sites
Ashgabat's religious landscape is dominated by Sunni Islam, with mosques serving as the principal sites of worship amid the city's over 93% Muslim population. The Turkmenbashi Ruhy Mosque, situated in the nearby village of Gypjak, stands as Turkmenistan's largest mosque and a major pilgrimage site, completed in 2004 after construction began in 2002 at a cost of $100 million.[131] Spanning 18,000 square meters, it accommodates 10,000 worshippers indoors, features four 91-meter minarets, and incorporates elements of Turkmen national motifs alongside traditional Islamic architecture.[215] Commissioned by former president Saparmurat Niyazov in his hometown, the mosque uniquely displays his Ruhnama alongside the Quran, blending religious observance with state ideology.[132] Within Ashgabat proper, the Azadi Mosque—also called Ertugrul Gazi Mosque—represents a prominent Turkish-influenced structure, capable of holding 5,000 for prayers and blending Islamic with Byzantine elements.[216] Other notable mosques include the Hezreti Omar Mosque and Hezreti Osman Mosque, which cater to local congregations in central districts.[217] Christian presence is minimal, marked by the House of Prayer of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, an active evangelical church located on Ataturk Street opposite a sports monument.[218] Historically, Ashgabat (then Ashkabad) hosted the world's first Baha'i House of Worship, constructed in 1908 as a domed structure surrounded by auxiliary buildings for education and welfare. Severely damaged in the 1948 earthquake and further eroded by rains, it was repurposed by Soviet authorities into an art gallery before demolition in 1962, leaving no physical remnant today.[219] The site's legacy underscores early 20th-century religious pluralism in the region, prior to state restrictions on non-Islamic faiths.[220]Palaces and Public Buildings
The Oguzkhan Presidential Palace functions as the official residence and primary administrative center for the President of Turkmenistan, positioned on Independence Square in central Ashgabat. Constructed between 1994 and 1997 by a French architectural firm adjacent to the earlier Palace of Turkmenbashi, the structure is distinguished by its three golden domes and expansive complex, which includes ceremonial halls and gardens.[221][222][223] The palace exemplifies the grandiose style prevalent in Ashgabat's government architecture, with photography strictly prohibited in its vicinity to maintain security protocols.[224] Public buildings in Ashgabat, many clad in white marble imported from abroad, include administrative complexes and ceremonial venues such as the Congress Palace, which hosts national assemblies and international events. These structures, erected primarily since the 1990s under directives from successive leaders, have garnered international architectural awards for their scale and design, though critics note their opulent construction amid limited public access and economic opacity.[225][226] The Wedding Palace, operational since 2011, represents a specialized public facility designed to conduct multiple marriage ceremonies simultaneously, accommodating up to seven weddings at once in its ornate halls. This building underscores the emphasis on monumental public architecture in the capital, often featuring symbolic motifs from Turkmen heritage integrated with modern engineering for earthquake resistance.[41][36]Sports and Recreation
Major Facilities and Events
The Ashgabat Olympic Complex, constructed primarily for the 2017 Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games, serves as the premier sports facility in the city and hosts a variety of national and international competitions. Spanning 1.466 million square meters with over 30 buildings, it includes the Saparmurat Turkmenbashy Olympic Stadium with a capacity of approximately 35,000 spectators, the Main Indoor Arena seating 15,000 for events like basketball and gymnastics, a velodrome for track cycling, and an aquatic center.[227][228] The complex's development, estimated at $5 billion, positioned Ashgabat as a capable host for large-scale indoor sports events in Central Asia.[229] Additional major facilities include the Winter Sports Complex, a multi-use indoor arena recognized as one of the largest ice hockey venues in the Commonwealth of Independent States. The Ashgabat Velodrome, part of the Olympic Complex, supports cycling competitions and training. These venues facilitate disciplines ranging from team sports to martial arts and winter activities.[228] Ashgabat has hosted significant international events, notably the 5th Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games from September 15 to 24, 2017, marking the first such games in Central Asia and involving over 3,000 athletes from 62 countries across 21 sports.[230] The city also hosted the 2018 IWF World Weightlifting Championships and the 14th World Kurash Wrestling Championship in November 2023, drawing participants from multiple nations.[231][232] Upcoming events include boxing championships in 2025, underscoring the city's growing role in regional sports diplomacy.[233]International Relations
Diplomatic Missions in Ashgabat
Ashgabat serves as the seat for all foreign diplomatic missions in Turkmenistan, reflecting the country's policy of permanent neutrality adopted in 1995 and recognized by the United Nations, which emphasizes bilateral diplomacy over multilateral alliances. As of 2020, the city hosted 24 embassies, two consulates, and additional representations, primarily from neighboring and regional states, with a focus on economic and energy cooperation rather than security pacts.[234] This limited presence underscores Turkmenistan's selective engagement, where many nations accredit ambassadors non-resident from nearby capitals like Ankara or Tehran due to the isolated nature of Ashkhabad's foreign policy. Key missions include the United States Embassy at 9 Pushkin Street, established to promote American commercial interests, support human rights monitoring, and issue visas, though operations are constrained by Turkmenistan's strict visa regime and surveillance.[235] The British Embassy, located within the Four Points Ak Altyn Hotel since 2018, handles consular services for UK citizens and facilitates trade links, particularly in hydrocarbons.[236] Russian and Chinese embassies maintain significant footprints, with Russia leveraging historical ties for influence in Central Asia and China advancing Belt and Road infrastructure projects, such as gas pipelines. Central Asian neighbors—Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan—operate embassies to coordinate on border issues, water resources, and regional stability. Other representations encompass Iran, Turkey, India, Pakistan, and the European Union Delegation, which coordinates development aid amid Turkmenistan's resource-driven economy.| Country/Organization | Mission Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States | Embassy | Focuses on energy diplomacy and citizen services; accredited since 1992.[235] |
| United Kingdom | Embassy | Relocated to hotel premises for operational efficiency; emphasizes trade.[236] |
| Russia | Embassy | Long-standing presence supporting cultural and economic ties.[234] |
| China | Embassy | Key player in energy investments and infrastructure.[234] |
| European Union | Delegation | Handles humanitarian and technical cooperation programs.[237] |