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  • Azadeghan Tea House near Naqsh-e Jahan (Imam) Square. The young generations try to have a more relaxed way of life.
    em2903073.jpg
  • Azadeghan Tea House near Naqsh-e Jahan (Imam) Square. The young generations try to have a more relaxed way of life.
    em2903064.jpg
  • Azadeghan Tea House near Naqsh-e Jahan (Imam) Square. The young generations try to have a more relaxed way of life.
    em2903059.jpg
  • Azadeghan Tea House near Naqsh-e Jahan (Imam) Square. The young generations try to have a more relaxed way of life.
    em2903076.jpg
  • Ateshkadeh. Often referred to as the Zoroastrian Fire Temple, this elegant neoclassical building, reflected in an oval pool in the garden courtyard, houses a flame that is said to have been burning since about AD 470. Visible through a window from the entrance hall, the flame was transferred to Ardakan in 1174, to Yazd in 1474 and to its present site in 1940. It is cherished (not worshipped) by the followers of the Zoroastrian faith – the oldest of the world's monotheistic religions.
    em2902139.jpg
  • Azadi Tower (Borj-e Azadi). The inverted-Y-shaped Azadi Tower, built in 1971 to commemorate the 2500th anniversary of the first Persian empire, is one of Tehran's visual icons. Designed by Hossein Amanat, it ingeniously combines modern architecture with traditional Iranian influences, most notably the iwan-style of the arch, which is clad in 8000 pieces of white marble.
    em2900188.jpg
  • em0763453.jpg
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