"Park of Victory in Uzbekistan: Serene oasis rich in history. Lush greenery, memorials, and monuments commemorate nation's resilience. A must-visit!" but now it is not as before.
We recently visited Victory Park, this walk was very emotional, delight mixed with pride for our country. A wonderful park, a wonderful complex. Walking from monument to monument, you experience incredible feelings that cannot be expressed in words. The views of the trenches, the exposition on the theme of concentration camps, weapons and military equipment - looking at this involuntarily brings a lump to my throat, and the music of the war years that comes from each column complements the atmosphere. I would like to thank the city administration for such a Victory monument. There is no future without the past, and only by respecting the past will our country prosper even better!
I advise everyone who is vacationing in Tashkent to visit this park. It is possible with children. The park is filled with patriotism, it is very interesting and informative (there is a museum on the territory, there is a recreated train station, themed open-air areas, monuments). The staff is responsive and attentive. Patriotic music is playing.
A nice new park dedicated to the Great Victory and the significant contribution of the peoples living in Uzbekistan to it. There are many installations and exhibits of military equipment in the park, all of which are available for inspection. Children enjoy exploring every part of tanks, planes and guns. Excellent diaramas dedicated to individual battles of the war, they will definitely be interesting and informative for children. I took off one star for the lack of consistency in the signatures to the exhibits. Some exhibits do not have signatures in Russian, but only in Uzbek (which is obvious and correct) and unexpectedly English!
Hardly a single Englishman was drafted from Tashkent, while more than 200 Heroes of the Soviet Union were born in Uzbekistan by Russian nationality.
I really liked this place. This is the third time we have come with our son, although it is far from home, every time we want to show and introduce him to a large number of people close to us. Admission for preschoolers is free, and for adults there is a symbolic price (about 6,000). The park is well maintained, very clean, there are 2 museums on the territory, a must-visit, very interesting and informative. Also, children can climb on tanks and trains, there is even a green area with trenches, the son invited his friend and took pistols and machine guns with them, they played from the bottom of their hearts. There are fountains (very cool on hot days) and lots of benches for relaxing. There is like 1 cafe on the territory, but I haven't seen anyone go there, and 1 shopping car with snacks, drinks and ice cream.
Victory Park turned out well, well-groomed, green, many different exhibits of military equipment and aircraft on the street, an imitation of a battle with trenches, a damaged tank, cannons and machine guns, and a field kitchen, as well as with the station building with trains departing to the front. It turned out to be a complete immersion in life and everyday life at the front. You can climb on the equipment and take pictures, there are ladders, unlike many memorials, the equipment is made in Russia and children can walk around, and even adults are interested. The main museum, made in the form of a poklonnaya hill and located under it, is not very interesting, there are few exhibits from the time of the Patriotic War, mostly personal belongings, medals, photographs, and the entrance there is separate, despite the fact that a ticket to the park is also purchased. The entrance to the mountain itself with an observation deck and the main monument at the top is carried out along two circular paths to a decent height, as the signs with the names of the heroes of the Soviet Union who went to the front from Uzbekistan rise along the path. In the central part there is a fountain made in the shape of an order, many paths for walking and benches for relaxing both in the shade of trees and in open places.
An unforgettable experience, just like in person. There is a rich Exposition, and different guns, tanks and airplanes. An installation with real trenches and a battlefield like a frozen moment. Impressive! You can touch everything, it is detailed to the smallest detail. Only the train station itself with a steam locomotive and carriages is worth it! Definitely number one in the travel program for your favorite student!
Clean, beautiful, and patriotic, everything is so close to real events. There are enough parking spaces. We were on May 9th, everything was organized. Of course, there are enough idiots who swim in fountains in front of monuments, but unfortunately there are.........
Enough places where you can sit and relax, enough places where small children can climb on tanks and guns. I recommend. The location may not be convenient for everyone, but it's worth it.
We liked it.
My impressions are mixed. As soon as we entered, I immediately heard "Victory Day", how beautifully they made the music specifically themed, and not just any radio trash. The expositions were taken by the soul. I secretly cried at some of them.
The park is well made, you can touch a lot of things, and you can even climb on tanks and guns (the joy of children). The museum is beautiful. I really walked through it almost in tears . Everything is clean and quiet.
The location is convenient, close to public transport stops. Quiet area.
One request to the administration is to make a cafe, preferably with a field kitchen. The child wanted to eat, so he had to go out.
Victory Park in Tashkent is a beautiful and atmospheric place dedicated to the memory of heroes. There are well-kept alleys, impressive monuments and a museum that helps you experience the history. A great place for walking and exploring Uzbekistan's military past.
It's a very cool park to explore the history! There is a museum with military-themed exhibits on site! I definitely recommend it for visiting, especially with children! A good location! Lots of parking spots!
We visited the new Victory Park in Tashkent for the second time on May 9. As last year, there are many visitors with children of all ages. The atmosphere is festive, but it was unpleasantly surprised that this year, in addition to victory songs, makoms were heard from the loudspeakers (which is in no way related to the theme of the park as bae!).
Wartime equipment is on display on the site, and everything can be rotated/ climbed / photographed. I was very pleased with the exposition of the central museum - each hall is voiced according to the theme of the hall, there are interactive monitors with additional information. The museum is small (only two floors), but it is clear that the exhibits are collected with great respect and we understand the significance of this victory for everyone.
Of the cons:
there are few toilets - the two that we met were with a queue of sufferers. There may be more, but we didn't get it)
It's hot in May), the summer weather is already in Tashkent, and water was sold only in a single cafe and in another shop at the other end of the park.
Beautiful beautiful park! Educational for children. You can plunge into the times of the Great Patriotic War, and remember the exploits of our grandfathers and great-grandfathers! Thank you for having a place where the whole family can come and honor the memory of our heroes and compatriots!
A great place, immerses in the atmosphere of that time, gives you the opportunity to realize the gravity and horror of the war.
On the street in the trenches, there is an opportunity to plunge into the life of the Red Army soldiers on the front line and touch the Maxim machine guns.
for maximum effect, I consider it necessary to dress the staff accordingly, add responsiveness and possibly guides to them.
The most sacred place for all peoples and nationalities of the whole world.A special place for military-patriotic events.Pobedy Park and the Museum of Glory were built in 2020 on May 9 on the personal initiative of the President of our Republic, Sh. M. Mirziyoyev.All members of our family are global and we are heartily proud that among the museum's exhibits there is a small corner dedicated to our beloved grandfather Zokhidov Tukhtasin, born in 1918, a participant in the defense of Leningrad. Victory Park and the Museum of Glory have really become the hallmark of our capital TASHKENT. Sincerely, family members of Tulkinjon Tukhtasinovich Zokhidov(15 people)g Ferghana
It's a very interesting place, and I think it's a must-visit. A lot of materials have been collected about Uzbekistan's contribution to the Great Victory. There is a museum and a park with an exhibition. It can be very important for children to know and understand the history of their homeland.
In hot weather, it's difficult to walk through the half of the park where the military equipment is located, the main alley. It was also strange to see the inscription "Windows is not activated" on the monitors to get acquainted with the stories of various military personnel and veterans. Otherwise, only positive emotions. There is a reverent and attentive approach in all installations and monuments. The installation with concentration camp prisoners was especially touching.
Honoring the memory of the dead and paying tribute is good, but today, to take away from living children and the elderly and just from the population the territory of the park, an open place with large trees, where we residents of Kara-Kamysh 2/1 walked in the morning, gathered and did exercises, young mothers walked with strollers, old people rested on benches - I think It's not fair. The territory of Victory Park is fenced with bars, entrance is 10,000 soums per adult, 5,000 per child. It turns out that I am alone with my grandson in the morning and in the evening, if we go out for a walk, there will be 30,000 soums. Uh, it won't work that way- it's better not to go in. Then tell us, good gentlemen, where can we walk??? On the front side of our 27th house, the road is covered in small stones, there is nowhere to set foot, and from the back, the gardens are shabby, there is no one to take care of these gardens, people are at work during the day - they don't have time, even if the mahalla or hakimiyat don't build large playgrounds instead of these jungle gardens, and the roads are narrow, two meters high, with a stroller you can't get through, and the traffic is two-way to cross the traffic jams near Victory Park.
The city pleased me with this park. Almost real installations, a retrospective of real military equipment and weapons, the Tashkent railway station during the war, a museum where materials about the participants of the Great Patriotic War, the Uzbeks, are carefully collected. A wonderful idea and its implementation. I hope that this powerful beginning will allow us to further enrich Victory Park with new historical facts and exhibits. No one is forgotten, nothing is forgotten!
Everything was done well and interestingly. The inscriptions are in three languages: Uzbek, Russian, English, and there are modern fashion: Uzbek and English. So the whole fight is still ahead. And Victory - it will come.
It's a good place to walk, but what they did with the greenery is the trouble with Tashkent. Karakamysh is one of the greenest corners of the capital, and this park has turned into a sun-drenched red-hot square... They are also expanding now. Make it free, and let people ride their bikes on it!!! They turned a statue into a non-daidim, and even under guard...
A beautiful park, you can feel the power, the smell of the motherland, the homeland, the memory of history.
Clean, calm, and green. Exhibits,railway station museum,field kitchen...We need to come and feel it..It's the same with children!
I liked the park, especially the children! There were many positive impressions from the museum (weapons, shells) and from the park (climbing tanks and trenches).
The coolest place, both for walking and for exploring the history of the great wars, the museum and the park do not stand still and are renewed almost every year, every year you can see something newer and newer.
It's a very nice place, you can come with your family, take a walk, and have a great view from the top. There are places where you can sit, as well as green areas.
Nice park, it will be interesting with children. There is a museum, military equipment, clean and spacious. In the evening, when it's not hot, you can take a walk.
It's a great place, the staff at the museum is wonderful, and the museum itself is very interesting and large. Pensioners are free to enter (free of charge), they need to have a pension book with them.
It's a very beautiful park. there are a lot of installations of the Second World War. And a very good museum. It's very beautiful in the evening. The entrance ticket is not expensive.
This is the third time I've written people, go to the park, don't leave it for later for children and young people, and you too, adults will be very interested in everything on the street and inside the museum, too, it's interesting, you can even take a tour it will tell you everything you wanted to know, you won't regret it, I wish you good luck
I was there recently, a great place for a family vacation. The children were interested. Especially the "Sean Sharaf Museum" is generally breathtaking. The decorations, exhibits, and furnishings are super.
Minus, the park closes very early, usually everyone wants to walk in the evening and the park is already closed.
The children liked the park and the museum very much 👍 Informative 👌 Everything is very coolly organized 👌 Military equipment, exhibits in the museum, even trenches and voice acting are 👍 A very beautiful park 👍
The park impresses with its scale and monuments. There is everything there: trenches, various monuments, wartime music, an exhibition of military equipment, museums, a train station, images of military operations. All the flesh up to the benches and the fence are decorated according to the theme of the park. The children and I were delighted. Entrance is paid
This is generally a masterpiece, great fellows, they rebuilt such a park so realistically, there are no words to describe such an environment, but I advise everyone who was not there to like it 100%
A place that struck me to the core. Clean, cozy, atmospheric, magnificent monuments, monuments. My soul cried and rejoiced, as in Uzbekistan they honor the memory of ALL the Heroes of the Second World War. Thank YOU, Uzbekistan!