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Mellat Park

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Type
  
Coordinates
  
35.7782° N, 51.4093° E

Related websites
  
www.cinema-mellat.com

Location
  
Status
  
Open

Mellat Park

Address
  
Tehran Province, Tehran, District 3, Valiasr Street، Iran

Hours
  
Open today · Open 24 hoursSaturdayOpen 24 hoursSunday(Oil Nationalization Day)Open 24 hoursHours might differMondayOpen 24 hoursTuesday(Nowruz)Open 24 hoursHours might differWednesday(Nowruz)Open 24 hoursHours might differThursday(Nowruz)Open 24 hoursHours might differFriday(Nowruz)Open 24 hoursHours might differ

Similar
  
Jamshidieh Park, Laleh Park, Golestan Palace, Milad Tower, Tochal

Mellat park


Mellat Park (Persian: Pārk e Mellatپارک ملت‎‎), literally the Nation Park, is an urban park in Tehran, Iran.

Contents

It is one of the largest recreation areas in Tehran, situated at the foot of the Alborz mountains adjacent to Valiasr Street in the east, and extends to the Chamran Expressway (Parkway) and Seoul Street to the west. It is watered by the winter-snow streams coming down from Mount Tochal close to 4,000 m high.

The park lies in the southern grounds of Tehran International Fair and Enghelab Club. It has pathways for walking and shade for picnics and relaxation, as well as facilities such as snack bars, coffee shops, and a small aviary. There is also a cineplex at the edge of the park.

Before the 1979 Revolution, it was known as Shahanshahi Park (پارک شاهنشاهیPārk e Šāhanšāhi; "Park of the King of Kings"). It is also the location of one of the steam-powered locomotives used on the first Iranian railway section, built during 1886–1888 [1]. The No. 664 locomotive was built by the Belgian Ateliers de Tubize and commissioned on 1887.

Mellat Park is home to the first musical fountains in Tehran. Since July 2008, they attract and entertain many families at night.

Mellat Cinema and Gallery, located in an area of 6000 square meters in southwestern part of the park, was opened during a ceremony on November 9, 2008.

The complex contains four theater halls with 280 seats, a cinematheque with 30 seats, and a space for holding exhibitions and marketing cultural products.

References

Mellat Park Wikipedia