It makes sense why it is like that, at least in countries that were part of the Soviet Union. They wanted to build housing for everyone that still gave them a good quality of life. In order to do that quickly, they focused on making them nice on the inside while not really caring for what they looked like on the outside. They used new techniques (I don’t remember if they invented them or if that was already a thing) to mass produce parts for the houses beforehand, so they only needed to assemble them and didn’t need to put a lot of work into designing each building.
They wanted to build housing for everyone that still gave them a good quality of life.
Uhhh I would suggest actually reading about the Kommunalka and survivors accounts. Multiple families per apartment, sometimes multiple families per room if it was that one family worked day shifts and the other at night, it was not at all uncommon for people to be designated a stairwell or closet to live in during the depression(s).
No idea where your downvote came from. The Kommunalka were horrible, it’s pure revisionist to say otherwise. They were originally constructed to house rural peasants who had been drafted from the countryside to work in urban industry. Multiple families per apartment, etc. etc., with no other choice because that’s you were given.
I think it’s rather that those buildings were built 50 years ago and they are still standing today as they were back then (some got thermal insulation and some color) but the inside could have been renovated last year, so it’s new
It makes sense why it is like that, at least in countries that were part of the Soviet Union. They wanted to build housing for everyone that still gave them a good quality of life. In order to do that quickly, they focused on making them nice on the inside while not really caring for what they looked like on the outside. They used new techniques (I don’t remember if they invented them or if that was already a thing) to mass produce parts for the houses beforehand, so they only needed to assemble them and didn’t need to put a lot of work into designing each building.
The people made it nice inside, not the USSR.
Uhhh I would suggest actually reading about the Kommunalka and survivors accounts. Multiple families per apartment, sometimes multiple families per room if it was that one family worked day shifts and the other at night, it was not at all uncommon for people to be designated a stairwell or closet to live in during the depression(s).
You say that USSR was “caring” about anyone’s comfort, I say you don’t know what you are talking about
No idea where your downvote came from. The Kommunalka were horrible, it’s pure revisionist to say otherwise. They were originally constructed to house rural peasants who had been drafted from the countryside to work in urban industry. Multiple families per apartment, etc. etc., with no other choice because that’s you were given.
I think it’s rather that those buildings were built 50 years ago and they are still standing today as they were back then (some got thermal insulation and some color) but the inside could have been renovated last year, so it’s new
Cuba has buildings that look like these.
Pretty much everywhere does. Turns out “unadorned gian box of apartments” is about the most efficient way to build housing.
I know it’s been demolished because of mismanagement, but here’s the Pruitt-Igoe complex in the USA.