National Garden Gate

Tehran, Iran | C.1922

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AWA Community collaboration

Submitted by: Saahil Menon

Written by: Accidentally Wes Anderson

Before Azadi Tower claimed the title, this gate was Tehran’s defining symbol. Built between 1922 and 1925, it guards what was once a military shooting range called Mashq Square, the name borrowed from the French word “marche.” The tilework tells stories in ceramic: lions clutching crowns, leopards, cannonballs, and scenes from the 1921 coup that reshaped Iran’s future. A small Russian-style dome perched above once housed a bugler who announced sunrise and sunset to old Tehran, a daily ritual that marked time for an entire city before the city outgrew the need for it.

The National Garden it was built to announce lasted only a few years before Tehran’s urban explosion swallowed the space whole. The gate remained, a neoclassical anchor in a metropolis of millions, surviving monarchy, revolution, and the kind of development pressure that erases quieter monuments without ceremony. Questions still linger about its true architect, historical records offering conflicting accounts of who actually designed the thing.

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