Building

New horizon

The Architectural transformation of Tselinny is a vision of architect Asif Khan reimagining the Soviet-built cinema as a new Centre of Contemporary Culture, an inclusive platform for creativity and public dialogue. Located in the heart of Almaty, in  Kazakhstan, the reconstructed building reclaims its layered history and shapes  possibilities for new generations. 

It is the architect’s poem to a city of vibrant cultural layers, to the ancient landscape of  glacier-capped mountains and rivers, and to the people of Almaty in the past, present  and future.

The new Tselinny Centre’s layout creates a journey of experiences and interactions. At  its core is the vast auditorium with an 18-meter ceiling, once the biggest cinema in  Soviet Union, now a flexible space awaiting the varied programming that artists and  curators imagine for Almaty’s audiences. 

Inspired by traditional Kazakh spatial awareness, the building’s ground level is  transformed into a single step-free plane, thus inviting everyone to experience  Tselinny as an open and accessible public space, designed to flow naturally with  Almaty’s landscape merging the boundaries between exterior and interior spaces. 

The reconstructed wings houses a “Capsule” gallery, learning “Atelier” and Library,  Tselinny Shop and offices, supported by a loading bay for flexible exhibitions and  events. The southern wing café opens onto a terrace overlooking a dry riverbed inspired landscape, which creates a green connection between the eastern plaza and  neighbouring Nikolskiy Park. A rooftop restaurant adds another layer of cultural  engagement, offering panoramic views of the city and mountains. Together with the  outdoor areas for leisure and communication, the public spaces of Tselinny Centre  form a new cultural ecosystem designed to regenerate the Almaty’s historic  “Broadway”.

Duality and Symbolism (From Sky to Earth)

The main facade is reimagined with a sweeping 42-meter curvilinear white cloud form,  inspired by nomadic cosmology. This cloud embodies the dialogue of Tengri-Sky and  Umai-Earth, and the infinite possibility of life which could be created from this union.  As day passes, the sun draws a cinematic motion of light and shadow on the facade’s  canvas. The ever-changing nature of Khan’s cloudscape adds a delicate and organic  presence to the monumental Soviet architecture. 

The subtle form of the 8.5m tall lamellas act as a “curtain before the cinema screen” -  as a homage to the original function of the building and an invitation to explore the spirit of contemporary art and culture.

This soft, layer of curving white material works in harmony with the glass behind,  creating a composite identity for Tselinny that is simultaneously panoramic,  cinematic, and misty. Like a cloud moving across the ground, it offers intrigue and mystery, revealing and concealing its interior gems, shifting with time and  perspective. At night, the foyer emanates light, echoing its memorable visual image  from the 1960s and inviting visitors to pass through a gentle threshold that connects  Sky and Earth, history and imagination. Passing through this “cloud” is to move into a  shared cultural realm, where Tselinny’s cinema legacy merges with its new role as a  space for inspiration and collaboration.
Layers of Memory

‍Asif Khan’s approach to balance the diverse historical context of Almaty is expressed  in the architecture of the building which synthesises modernism of 20th century,  complex cultural identity and a new universal language which exists beyond time and space. Neighbouring the golden domes of St. Nicholas Cathedral, the reconstructed  building of Tselinny Centere adds harmonious layers to the preserved architectural  fabric.

Hidden behind the plaster board during the previous renovation in the early 2000s  and rediscovered in 2018, the original sgraffito by the Soviet artist Evgeniy Sidorkin,  has been carefully restored and now is open to the city once again. Muted tones and  ghosted areas acknowledge the artwork’s historical damage, creating an “artistic  ground” that honours past generations while leaving space for new narratives.

The new wings of the building, made of fibre-reinforced concrete panels, are  decorated with a metaphorical relief reminiscent of a cloudscape of petroglyphs,  which simultaneously refers to ancient Kazakh civilisations, Sidorkin’s sgraffito and  the artistic language of future generations.

As a public center and a space of open ground, Tselinny is now poised as a boundless canvas—inviting Almaty’s contemporaries to add new stories, traditions, and dreams.