There are several major types of apartment blocks common in Russia. A
Khrushchyovka is probably the most popular type. Usually it is a 4 or 5-storied concrete-paneled or brick apartment building with notoriously small apartments, extensively constructed in the 1960s and 1970s to solve the housing problem.
Stalin-era buildings (
Stalinka) from 1930s - 1950s are usually larger and more comfortable, however many of them require major renovation. One more type of apartment blocks is
Brezhnevka built mostly in the 1970s and 1980s. Apartments there are a bit larger, and the buildings themselves are 9-16 stories high. Finally, the housing boom in 2000s led to wide-scale construction of new apartment buildings from economy to premium class based both on improved Soviet projects and new original decisions. A typical Russian apartment includes a kitchen, a lavatory, sometimes a balcony and from one to three rooms. Unlike many other countries, when Russian people describe an apartment, they count all rooms, not just bedrooms. It's a common practice to have only one lavatory in the apartment, though modern apartments may have more lavatories and rooms. New
residential areas have been constructed in the suburbs of
Moscow and
St. Petersburg since the 2010s to meet the growing
housing demand. The buildings are primarily 20- to 30- story blocks, which have faced criticism for their crowded locations. The world’s most crowded
apartment block, Novy Okkervil, houses 20,000 people and was built in 2015. It contains 3,708 apartments with 35 entrances and 25 floors. Most apartments are one or two-bedrooms, and there’s an average of around four to six apartments on each floor. The giant apartment complex is situated in the town of
Kudrovo, just outside
St. Petersburg. Russian people call this kind of complex ‘Cheloveinik‘. == References ==