Some time ago, I herded the usual flock of students in Architecture for a dozen days in Mongolia. The main purpose was to build up an academic exchange between their school and ours through a sort of "summer" workshop !
After a few days in Ulaan Baator discovering that urban sprawl is a common disease, we went north to a small village with Mongolian students and French ones to map the village to allow it's community to build new houses and public spaces with a scheme and projects in time.
The small village was not very far of the Russian border, the train was the only mean of transportation for us, and like in the old Far-West movies, the train stations are the meeting places for most !
First thing we saw at our arrival at night was the "Gers", those felted dome shaped tents, as our guest house for student had several on the roof of their building. Sort of getting acquainted with the traditional way of living in the middle of a modern city (or almost)...
Ger at night... by
ArchiVue, sur Flickr - 85mm f/1.8D and D700.
The view we had from our Gers...
UlaanBaatar, la nuit... by
ArchiVue, sur Flickr - 35mm F/2D and D700.
At daytime we could feel the haze, mostly created by stoves used for heating and food preparations...
U.B.... by
ArchiVue, sur Flickr - 85mm f/1.8D and D700.
Time for a walk in U.B. (short for Ulaan Baator), the street at night felt bumpy, looking at our hotel we understand that in this district, the streets are just earth with no special preparations...
Les gers sur le toit... by
ArchiVue, sur Flickr - 50mm f/1.8D and D700.
But Mongolia is a horse country and culture, so urban children have bronze sculpture to ride...
Free ride... by
ArchiVue, sur Flickr - 50mm f/1.8D and D700.