The post-Soviet city is where future and past, ideology and memory clash. Here, five photographers explore the architectural legacy of the eastern bloc, giving their personal take on the lure of the brutalist landscape.

Egor Rogalev is capturing suburban edgelands which, no longer charged with utopian ideals, have become kingdoms of isolation. Boris Kralj captures not just Belgrade, but My Belgrade: the city of his childhood transformed by political turmoil and war but still bearing traces of the world long gone. Marco Citron appropriates the aesthetics of old postcards to showcase the strange architectural experiments of former regimes. Alexey Bogolepov studies the towering relics of Soviet municipal structures, transforming them into black and white ghosts that still retain an unsettling power. And Andrej Vasilenko looks at modern Lithuanian identitythrough the changing face of its capital, Vilnius.