Classroom lesson · Ashgabat - The White Marble City · 🇹🇲 Turkmenistan

Ashgabat - The White Marble City

A city that set a Guinness World Record for its brilliant white buildings

Wide white marble boulevards and gleaming marble buildings in Ashgabat at dusk

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Ashgabat is the capital city of Turkmenistan, and it holds a very unusual Guinness World Record: the highest concentration of white-marble-clad buildings in the world. Everywhere you look, there are gleaming white buildings that shine so brightly in the sun that visitors say the whole city sparkles.

Tell me more

Thousands of buildings in Ashgabat are covered in white marble - a smooth, shiny stone that reflects sunlight. The city was rebuilt and expanded over many years, and architects designed the wide avenues, fountains and grand public buildings to look impressive and welcoming. From above, the white city stands out against the sandy desert all around it.

The city has an enormous 133-metre-tall structure shaped like an eight-pointed star called the Neutrality Arch, and a giant outdoor fountain complex that runs along a central boulevard. The fountains are decorated with horses and local symbols, because horses are very important to Turkmen culture.

Ashgabat sits between the Karakum Desert and the Kopetdag mountains. On a clear day, you can see the snow-capped peaks of the mountains from the city streets. The contrast between the gleaming white buildings, the beige desert and the grey-blue mountains makes for a very striking view.

The city is also home to museums, parks and a huge covered bazaar called the Tolkuchka - one of the biggest markets in Central Asia, where you can find handwoven Turkmen carpets, jewellery, dried fruit and spices spread out across stall after stall.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think architects chose white marble for so many buildings? What feeling do you think they wanted to give visitors?
  2. 02Ashgabat is surrounded by desert but also overlooks mountains. How might living between two such different landscapes shape everyday life?
  3. 03If your school were to set a Guinness World Record, what would you want it to be for?
  4. 04What would you most want to see if you visited Ashgabat - the marble buildings, the mountain views or the huge market?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design your own 'record-breaking' building on paper. Choose one feature - tallest, most windows, most colourful, most fountains - and draw a labelled plan showing the front, side and top view. Write one sentence explaining what Guinness record you are going for.