livestock mechanization, textile handicraft industry, individual pavilions of the union republics alexei shchusevbition, but it seems that all the architects who worked in moscow at that time made their contribution. this is the last work of fedor shevel. it's all uh, modern moscow and right there we see the pavilion of kyrgyzstan and it's all side by side and with villages and yurts and despite the fact that most of the exhibition looked like one big village. it was here that the first examples of the russian avant-garde in architecture appeared. here we see here such a complex structure, quite characteristic of constructivism, asymmetrical design. this is the shag pavilion that was designed. melnikov, all the buildings were wooden ; now almost nothing is left of them, but after 100 years , newspaper articles help to feel that atmosphere. one of the correspondents who made reports about the exhibition was then a novice writer. mikhail bulgakov was most of all a young author, impressed by the pavilions with confectionery products and from the entrance he immediately embraces the sweet smell of ca