Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky
Victory park. Alexander Nikolsky

Combat vehicles, as if left over from another parade, gradually fill the urban spaces commonly referred to as «Victory Park». Tanks and planes, ideologically associated with the cult of the Great Patriotic War, most often represent examples of relatively new equipment, recently decommissioned from active military units. Supporting this process, armored vehicles are sometimes installed on private initiative in personal «parks.» Instruments created to solve certain problems, turning into monuments, characterize the long-term perspective of the country.

Origami, NATO's «conventional enemy» aircraft, are made from authentic blueprints of missile weapons.