I live in Poland. We have both of them.
- Soviet-era apartment buildings
PROs:
- everything within a walking distance (shops, schools, a clinic, etc)
- a lot of parks nearby
- fucking wind corridors
- you can’t piss from your window to your neighbors coffe cup
- you will see some greenery from your window
CONs:
- tiny
- very low ceilings - you most likely won’t be stretch your arm upwards.
- very bad acoustic - you can hear downstairs cutting green onions
- a lot of apartments on a floor (and very tiny lifts)
- Modern buildings:
PROs:
- high ceilings
- you can piss from your window on your neighbor’s bed if you’re into it.
CONs:
- … we have a whole wikipedia page about it: https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patodeweloperka
- I honestly don’t want to talk about it, it’s so sad. Generally speaking, bad quality (but deceptively good looking) places that cost too much, in a shitty neighborhood.
- no wind corridors so say hello to air pollution
Now, I know this sub tends to romanticize USSR, but during occupation (so until 1990) it wasn’t that you had an apartment for yourself for every single person. If we just want to consider recent history (like 1980) then:
- your apartment wasn’t yours - it was tied to your job. Like US healthcare. If you lost the job, you would lose the apartment. They were also limited to at most 1 per family.
- If you wanted to move to a different city to get a job there, then it could be impossible if the company didn’t have free apartments there. Often it didn’t. There was an semi-official apartment swapping market that often involved a chain of swaps in multiple cities.
- In practice you wouldn’t get a bigger apartment if you had children. You could try to swap for it. Most apartments were overcrowded and multigenerational AND small. It was common for a 3 generational family to live in a 3 room apartment (not “bedroom”, room).
Other than the ceilings part your cons describe most American apartments.
And people would kill here to have nearby parks and stuff within walking distance
You realize that millions of people living in US and Canada would kill for that right now? It’s actually very common at this point for multiple people to share apartments komunalka style because their jobs don’t pay a living wage.
Also, you create a false dichotomy here suggesting that if free housing was built the way USSR did it today then it would have to be built to the 1950s standard. Obviously there’s absolutely no reason why you couldn’t be building modern style apartments.
Also, you create a false dichotomy here suggesting that if free housing was built the way USSR did it today then it would have to be built to the 1950s standard.
I was describing buildings from the `80.
Obviously there’s absolutely no reason why you couldn’t be building modern style apartments.
… so the ones I described as “so many cons that I’m too sad to talk about them and we have a separate wiki page to describe how awful they can get”?
I was describing buildings from the `80.
Everything I said in my comment still applies if you replace 50 with 80 in it.
… so the ones I described as “so many cons that I’m too sad to talk about them and we have a separate wiki page to describe how awful they can get”?
Once again, you don’t seem to understand the simple fact that millions of people in the west have it worse right now.
komunalka
also, I’m not talking about them. They were a thing in the 50’s (after the war) when people were sharing bathrooms or kitchens, they were no longer really a thing in the 80’s. In the 80’s apartments had their own bathrooms and kitchens.
edit: isn’t that basically “Friends” for USA people? :D
Soviet apartments in the 80s are incomparably better than this, it’s incredible that you cannot understand this https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tent_cities_in_the_United_States
Only $200/mo for utilities?!
They didn’t get to choose the apartment they lived in, they couldn’t own them, they were often basic with communal kitchens and bathrooms. It’s a good thing they were free because the wages were low, and people were assigned jobs so there was little they could do to improve their careers, not that skilled people got paid much more.
I mean… What’s worse, what you’ve described, or paying 50% of your income for a basic apartment or else run from bulldozers as a homeless person? At least people had shelter.
Could I trouble you for some citations?
they were often basic with communal kitchens and bathrooms
The horror, the horror. A building made a decade after a sixth of their population and most of their infrastructure was destroyed by a capitalist invasion and there was communal amenities. Also do you prefer to cook alone?
🥱
Comparing a modern day American apartment to a Soviet one from 1950 lol okay.
youre right, a soviet one wouldnt be reduced to ashes during a fire, not a fair comparison.
Freedom and human rights are shit down the drain and heads straight to soviet kitchen.
It boggles my mind how people today can support such an evil ideology, just because current times are difficult.
Might I suggest moving tf to North Korea, or perhaps don’t move to a Liberal cesspool of a city and update the folk online with your personal dilemmas?
Src: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rights_in_the_Soviet_Union
Implying our cities suck because they lean left and not because they’ve been built for cars instead of people
Also didn’t your elementary school teacher tell you not to cite Wikipedia?
I was born long before the information super-highway dude
Ah yes, because propaganda famously didn’t exist before the internet was invented. You are very intelligent.
Nothing. Absolutely nothing of credibility source will ever satisfy your feeble mind.
Absolutely nothing of credibility source
If you’re going to call someone stupid, you should probably be grammatically correct when doing it.
Entire books have been written on the subject, but here you are a stable genius.
Imagine talking about human rights while ignoring the very basic necessities of life. 🤡
Remind me, what was the first European country to legalize abortion? Oh, after that, what was the second country to legalize abortion?
When did soviet women get the right to divorce their husbands?
What was the literacy rate before the soviet union? What was it after? Answer the same questions about women’s literacy.
What was the schooling rate before the soviet union? What was it after? Answer the same questions about women’s schooling.
What was the college graduation rate before the soviet union? What was it after? Answer the same questions about women’s college graduation.
What was the first European state to decriminalize homosexuality? How did the Stasi respond to gay civil rights protestors? What did Castro do upon learning that gay people were being mistreated in (alternative to conscription) labor camps? All of this decades before Lawrence V Texas. Hell, trans people got free transition care in Cuba before Lawrence V Texas. The socialist record on LGBT rights isn’t perfect but it is better than capitalist countries. I mean, hell, look at the way capitalist Germany treated lgbt people during the holocaust.
first European state to decriminalize homosexuality
France in 1800.
Huh, TIL. The main point still stands that the soviet union actually made a lot of progress on human rights, even compared to imperialist countries with more accumulated capital.