ERA draws on English park art to recapture the carefree nature of urban nature. From whatever angle you look at the ERA courtyard, it will remind you of a postcard taken by a talented nature photographer.
The meticulous work of Gafas landscape architects, who filigree ERA's landscapes down to the finest lines and halftones, is responsible for this sense of naturalness and authenticity.
While in classical English parks artificial ruins of castles and towers were popular, in the ERA this function is performed by a hedge of western thuja, vines and small-leaved lime trees.
The imperfect yet enduring hedges evoke a sense of a civilization lost to time.
Through vine-covered arches you can get inside these green walls, into the heart of ERA — the central park.
The perfectly cut English lawn in front of the pavilion beckons to bask in the July sun. Or do a dozen sun salutations at a yoga class.
Savor the taste of life
You won't have to rush and waste time in traffic jams to spend the evening at dinner with family or friends.
A cozy cafe, a cup of aromatic coffee and your favorite dish is just a short walk away. The atmosphere of peace and tranquility will allow you to put time on pause and completely dissolve in aromas, tastes and long conversations with loved ones.
Indulge in childhood
In the ERA courtyard, children will invent a hundred ways to follow their own nature. Next to the central park there is a green labyrinth. This is the best place to combine catching up with hide-and-seek.
On the sports field near the kindergarten, they organise streetball competitions and conquer the climbing wall. The playground is equipped with a log climbing wall by the German company Richter, swings, roundabouts and a large wooden platform with several exciting routes to the top of the wide slide.
The playgrounds have trampolines and swings, a slide and sandbox, roundabouts and tourniquets. Parents who do not want to join in the game can relax on the lawn or sit in rocking chairs in the apple orchard.
Feel Rested
The hedge hides loud children from quiet adults so they don't interfere with the kids' fun. But that doesn't mean that adults will be bored at ERA.
They enjoy romantic walks through flower fields and under arched pergolas, intense workouts on the outdoor gym, friendly streetball games, and relaxing afternoon naps in a hammock.
Picturesque relief created with geoplastic and green walls divide the courtyard space into cozy rooms — so that everyone finds a favorite place to relax.
Feel like a movie starFeel like
a movie star
National geographic
The city is geometric. It is delineated by the horizontals of the streets and the verticals of the buildings. Even the green areas in the city are subordinated to the plan and do not encroach on the red lines. But ERA dilutes this rationality with pastoral English landscapes.
Apple orchard
Children's area
Maze
tracery pavilion
Worcout zone
Playing field
Pergola
Children's area
Lounge
Table tennis
Children's area
Children's area
Flower meadow
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An English park is designed to mimic the wild, and in ERA, this natural aesthetic triumphs over the urban landscape.
ERA fills urban life with park romance. Sunday picnics on a flowery meadow. Secret dates under the arched vaults of green pergolas.
Moments of pure bliss, shared in the garden, gathered like a basket of sweet apples on a long summer day. All of this is possible in ERA.
Whatever the season, ERA remains a natural oasis in the city center. The colors change, but the courtyard remains picturesque and fresh.
There are no secondary paintings in this album of landscapes collected by seasons: each one is worthy of decorating your home.
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Spring comes to ERA with the white blossoms of apple trees and the fragrance of lilacs.
Residents spend their summers in the shade of pergolas covered with grapes and ivy, among a riot of unbrushed grasses and colorful flowerbeds.
Autumn greets the courtyard in bright clothing of rowan, willow, and red oak leaves.
Winter wraps the emerald needles of the pines in snow.
Spring
Spring comes to ERA with the white blossoms of apple trees and the fragrance of lilacs.
Summer
Residents spend their summers in the shade of pergolas covered with grapes and ivy, among a riot of unbrushed grasses and colorful flowerbeds.
Autumn
Autumn greets the courtyard in bright clothing of rowan, willow, and red oak leaves.
Winter
Winter wraps the emerald needles of the pines in snow.
It had happened once before. The austerity of the regular French gardens in the Versailles style required a new approach in which nature would not be built according to rulers and molds.
So in the early 18th century, the artist William Kent and the royal gardener Charles Bridgeman invented the English park, an idyllic landscape whose aristocratism cracked the boundaries of primness while maintaining nobility.
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