• VeryFrugal@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    Homelessness is definitely more depressing. That’s not even comparable.

    But apartment blocks like that are also really, really depressing. Humans are not built for living in a crammed cage of a building.

    • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Built? By whom?

      The issue with soviet blocks was not the density. The actual design was brilliant as each of these blocks had all conveniences like schools and shops within reach.

      The issue as with most soviet union is corruption and management incompetence. They took one design and applied to 15% of world’s land mass. So the house in deep Siberia and coast of warm Azerbaijan were the almost the same. To add society was so broken than no one actually cared for the vision these houses had. This is entirely system failure not a design one.

      People live just fine in close quarters - just take a look at Japan.

  • Absurdly Stupid @lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    What’s right wing architecture?

    Blue tarps? But they’re blue! haha, you wings are so silly with your flapping about

    But seriously, have they not seen an apartment building or strip mall before? The architecture where I live is far from inspiring, it’s just strip mall after strip mall for miles, then some big block office buildings. Yippee

  • Vreyan31@reddthat.com
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    3 months ago

    When I visited Berlin, I heard a theory that these Soviet era units were why the cost of living was still accessible to creative-types so a big part of why the city is culturally thriving.

  • Steve@communick.news
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    3 months ago

    It’s also not left wing architecture. It’s the cross roads of a left wing housing initiative, and a right wing refusal to spend money on the public good. What you get is something akin to unsecured prison architecture.

  • wpb@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I love this kind of thread. It always attracts some guy who finds it necessary to point out that in the USSR people had to endure the absolute horrors of having roommates. I think I saw him phrase it as them having “survived” roommates once.

  • hayvan@piefed.world
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    3 months ago

    It’s called city planning. I don’t know where this is but the commie blocks where I was born were within walking distance of shops, cafes, schools, had cheap central heating, all had children’s parks and green areas between buildings, and public transport to the city center. All at dirt cheap prices since they were not built for profit, and could only be owned by people living in them or rented from the state.

    • 1984@lemmy.today
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      3 months ago

      People in the west never hear anything positive about communism, so…

      Everyone knows what their news talk about. A few people read books, but not many.

      I would not want to live under communism, but it certainly is portrayed as more crazy than it actually is.

      There are zero tv shows about communist people doing normal things in life. Its pretty much a banned topic that people go out and party, watch movies, eat pizza… Same as in the west. We are not very different.

      And if you travel, you see this. Its just people. But yes, the leaders are insane. In every major nation.

  • jimmy90@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    homelessness has many causes but can be survivable and relatively more enjoyable than living in a hell hole poorly designed, maintaned and serviced high density clusterfuck

    commie architecture fucking suuuuucks

    • chaogomu@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Corpo housing isn’t mcmansions. They’re factory built homes shipped to site and dropped on locally poured foundations, sometimes with basements.

      Sure, they can be decent sized, but the mcmansion is overly large and aimed at a different crowd, a crowd that’s increasingly unable to afford them.

      Source; I grew up in a corpo housing development from the 60s or 70s. The houses all looked identical from the outside, but had a few different floor plans, one down the street was actually two of the wrong halves put together, which meant that one of the closets didn’t have a door and could only be accessed by someone crawling in through a gap near the ceiling.

      Thankfully there was no HOA, so the houses quickly picked up some individuality.

    • [object Object]@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      https://bankfoto.info/zdjecia/petrzalka-3/

      Not the best example: Eastern-European countries tend to overcompensate and overdo the painting, making the result too noisy. Nordic cities look much better, precisely because they choose muted and coordinated colors, and usually paint the whole house instead of making patchy blobs. It so happens that khrushchyovkas are again better at it too, because they were built smaller and painted in one color, often muted orange or brown.

      • Jiral@lemmy.org
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        3 months ago

        I did not say that I would consider those buildings in Petrzalka the height of all taste and beauty but the issue with it is not the colour of the buildings. It is the urban layout on ground level and the rundown horrendously car centric design. That is really dragging the area down. On the plus side, there is so much greenery even with all of that, that it is not looking grey there, certainly not during Spring-Autumn.

        PS: Bratislava is west of Stockholm, has nothing to do with Orthodox Europe and Slovakia stopped being part of the East block almost as long ago as it was ever part of it.

      • merdaverse@lemmy.zip
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        3 months ago

        The bottom image is heavily tuned to have more vibrant colors. No place in real life has such strong hues. I’d suspect that place in real life looks very much like the above image