Khazar Islands

Khazar Islands
Rendering of the Khazar Islands
Geography
Location 25 km (16 mi) south of Baku, Azerbaijan
Coordinates 40°14′29″N 49°38′03″E / 40.24134°N 49.634242°E / 40.24134; 49.634242Coordinates: 40°14′29″N 49°38′03″E / 40.24134°N 49.634242°E / 40.24134; 49.634242
Archipelago Baku Archipelago
Total islands 41
Area 20 km2 (7.7 sq mi)
Administration
Capital city Baku
Additional information
Official website http://khazarislands.com/

The Khazar Islands (Azerbaijani: Xəzər adaları), also known as Caspian Islands,[1] is a stalled development of artificial islands 25 km (16 mi) south of Baku, Azerbaijan consisting of 41 islands extending 3,000 hectares (30 km2; 7,400 acres; 12 sq mi) over the Caspian Sea.[2][3][4]

The Plan

The stated plan was for a $100 billion city aiming to house 1 million residents in a development with 150 schools, 50 hospitals and daycare centers, numerous parks, shopping malls, cultural centers and a university campus plus a Formula 1 quality racetrack around a centrepiece $2 billion Azerbaijan Tower (planned to have been the tallest in the world).[2][3][5] The city was expected to be equipped with 150 bridges and a large municipal airport to connect the islands to the mainland.[2][3][6]

All of these facilities were to be able to withstand up to magnitude 9.0 earthquakes.[5][7] The president of the controlling Avesta Group of Companies, Ibrahim Ibrahimov, reportedly had the original idea in a flash while flying between Baku and Dubai.[8][9][10] He told reporters that American, Turkish, Arab and Chinese investors had showed interest in the project which he described as being like a "new Venice".[1][4][11]

Construction and demise

Construction on Khazar Islands began in March 2011 and substantial building works were achieved during Azerbaijan's economic boom. In August 2014, the main beach area was opened with a fanfare with many sky-scraper buildings already part constructed.[12] However, the project's gigantic scale and overly ambitious design became more obvious in 2015 as the oil price crashed. Between May 12 and May 27, 2015 Ibrahimov was arrested due to his company's inability to start repayment of his/Avesta's debt to the International Bank of Azerbaijan, a debt then reckoned to be around US$57 million.[13] After Ibrahimov's release, company statements later insisted that the project was still scheduled to be completed between 2020 and 2025 with investors from China cited as keen to fill the funding gap.[13] In an April 2017 interview, Ibrahimov insisted that long-delayed works would finally restart later that year.[14] In October 2017 Ibrahimov was reported to have restarted his work with Avesta and declared that he would not leave Azerbaijan but raised doubts as to the continuation of the Khazar Islands project [15] and as of January 2018, there is little sign of any work resuming.[16]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Evgrashina, Lada; Antidze, Margarita (April 11, 2012). "Azerbaijan aims to put up world's tallest building". Reuters.
  2. 1 2 3 Iliaifar, Amir (February 10, 2012). "$2 billion Azerbaijan Tower to usurp Saudi Arabia's Kingdom Tower as world's tallest". Digital Trends.
  3. 1 2 3 Medina, Samuel (February 9, 2012). "Azerbaijan To Build One Kilometer-Tall Skyscraper". Architizer.
  4. 1 2 Alexander, Anila (April 13, 2012). "Azerbaijan Plans World's Tallest Tower At 'New Venice' (PHOTOS)". International Business Times.
  5. 1 2 Medina, Samuel (February 9, 2012). "Azerbaijan's Plans for a One Kilometer-Tall Skyscraper". The Altlantic Cities.
  6. Cameron, Charley (February 10, 2012). "Azerbaijan's Avesta Group Unveils Plan to Build New World's Tallest Tower". Inhabitat.
  7. "Azerbaijan to build world's tallest skyscraper". Azernews. January 30, 2012.
  8. New York Times article on Ibrahimov's vision for the islands
  9. ViaTechnik report on the islands
  10. Haji Ibrahim Nehramli - Dream Big, Dream Tall.
  11. Dewsbury, Rick (April 12, 2012). "Azerbaijan reveals plans for world's tallest building at 3,500ft high". Mail Online.
  12. Azadliq video report of August 2014 celebration concert
  13. 1 2 Milli.az report on Avesta and the Khazar Islands
  14. Reports of April 2017 interviw with Ibrahimov
  15. Xural Report October 2017
  16. Jan 2018 report

Further reading

  • Savodnik, Peter (February 8, 2013). "Azerbaijan Is Rich. Now It Wants to Be Famous". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
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