It’s also, like, houses even in the US were like that during the same era as the Khrushchevkas. Sorry that mid 20th century housing isn’t up to 21st century standards.

  • @REEEEvolution@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 years ago

    Only the lacking insolation and the thin walls are real downsides. The size of the bathrooms and kitchens is completely fine, as is the size of the flats. Lacking elevators? No shit, these buildings are from the 50s! In a state of disrepair? Could this be related to the dissolution of the USSR somehow? I wonder, I wonder…

    • @AgreeableLandscapeOP
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      2 years ago

      Also, insulation can be retrofitted. A few cm of fibreglass or cellulose fiber does wonders for both heat and sound containment.

    • Insulation is not even a problem nowadays, there are external insulation basically everywhere on those building in Poland now, and afaik everywhere in Europe. And it is pretty cheap since even small one building housing associacions are able to afford it.

      Elevators are a problem for old and disabled, getting to 3+ story can be harsh few times per day.

      Size - it’s fine. I wonder about the 2,5 meters height. Are they giants or something to complain? 2,5 is plenty, average human can’t even reach it when stretching hand. It can only be a problem when you have really big ass chandelier and routinely bang your head on it.

  • @CommunistWolf@lemmygrad.ml
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    192 years ago

    I’m in a house built in “the west” in the 21st century with a floor-ceiling height of 2.4M. What are these moans? They seem entirely fake.

    • @AgreeableLandscapeOP
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      112 years ago

      Also, who cares! Unless you’re 2.4 m tall, in which case your name is probably Goliath, why are ceilings that height considered “too low”? Am I the only one who doesn’t care about ceiling height as long as I don’t hit my head on anything?

  • Noooooo, it’s impossible that temporary housing built in order to fulfill the most burning needs in a country utterly devastated by world war and only intended to last for few decades have disadvantages!

    Actually, those houses are standing even today with often semi proper maintenance, while modern private developers burgie ghettos are breaking after few years, sometimes even during the building. There’s one khrushchyovka building in Germany that is repaired and still inhabited after military fighter crashed in middle of it.

    Khruschyovka > murican skyscrappers

    • @frippa
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      102 years ago

      Just imagine when we will transform skyscrapers in social housing 😎

  • @Munrock@lemmygrad.ml
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    152 years ago

    Can someone make a version of this, but for a tent? Because that’s how the US is dealing with homelessness.

    • @AgreeableLandscapeOP
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      112 years ago

      Does running over slums with a police bulldozer help? They sure think so.

    • @AgreeableLandscapeOP
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      2 years ago

      Because elevators at the time was a lot more expensive than now. The technology was less mature. Between choosing to spend a large portion of the budget to build elevators or using that money to build more units to accommodate everyone, they chose the latter. You could always get first floor units if you had accessibility requirements.

        • @AgreeableLandscapeOP
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          2 years ago

          Seriously though, Americans (and Canadians) will drive for an hour to an expensive gym and run on a treadmill instead of just taking a jog outside for free, or use a stair climbing machine while refusing to use any real stairs. Just, why?

          • JucheBot1988
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            172 years ago

            Cause FREEDOM, baby!

            But seriously, I don’t know. The ways of the Burger Tribe are truly incomprehensible.

        • @panic@lemmygrad.ml
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          172 years ago

          Some people will always need elevators and that’s okay. So it’s more like: evil Soviets being incapable of making technology immediately affordable

        • @AgreeableLandscapeOP
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          2 years ago

          Because it’s probably an armchair “architect” blindly hating Soviet apartments because /r/architecture told them to.

  • @HaSch@lemmygrad.ml
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    102 years ago

    Living in a student dorm, I couldn’t give less of a shit about room sizes. Good community is worth more than any amount of space