HOW OLD IS THIS HOUSE

Russia of big cities

Kon Tiki's project shows the age of buildings in the 80 largest cities of the country.
Arthur Kislitsyn
curator of how-old-is-this.house project
We collected available open data on buildings in the majority of large Russian cities as of 2022—when they were built, their area, floors, and other features.

For the project, we compiled a list of cities with a population exceeding 250,000 according to the 2010 census.

Below is a primary analysis of the dataset. We highlighted the most interesting findings and created interactive charts.
Choose city on the map or from
About 70 million people live in selected cities, which makes up almost half of Russia's population.
We divided the historical age line into 10 most important historical periods: pre-revolutionary, 1920s, 1930s, 1940-1956, Khrushchev, Brezhnev, Gorbachev, 1990s, 2000s, 2010s.
You can select cities.
The colors of the periods are the same throughout the article and the maps.
Late Soviet architecture shapes the appearance of most modern Russian cities, although a few exceptions can be found.
You can select the periods on the charts.
Share of total floor area (?) in each time period and city (%):
total floor area
total floor area = ground (footprint) area X number of floors
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The rarest are the pre-revolutionary and interwar buildings, which account for a few per cent of the total in some standout cities.

The same applies to buildings from the Stalin era.
Share of total floor area (?) for each period and city (%):

Pre-revolutionary Imperial Russia

before 1917
Russian architecture has a long history. Over the centuries, various European and local styles have come into fashion: Byzantine, Ornamentation (Uzorochye), Baroque, Classicism, Historicism, and Art Nouveau. However, such architecture is now the least represented in our cities.

There are several reasons for this. Firstly, the most widespread wooden residential architecture is quite vulnerable. Secondly, the main process of Russian urbanization occurred only in the 20th century.

The majority of pre-revolutionary buildings stay present in the largest cities of the Russian empire.
Top 8 cities with largest remaining total floor area of pre-revolutionary buildings:
Saint-Petersburg (46 млн м²)
Moscow (21 mln m²)
Nizhny Novgorod (2,5 mln m²)
Samara (2,3 mln m²)
Rostov-on-Don (2 mln m²)
Astrakhan (1,9 mln m²)
Saratov (1,7 mln m²)
Kazan (1,7 mln m²)
The pre-revolutionary architecture prevails in other cities.

In St. Petersburg, every 6th square meter of real estate was constructed before 1917.

In Astrakhan and Vladikavkaz, it's almost every tenth square meter.
Top 8 cities with largest share of pre-revolutionary buildings:
Saint-Petersburg (17%)
Astrakhan (8%)
Vladikavkaz (8%)
Kaliningrad (6%) **
Tomsk (5%)
Taganrog (5%)
Kostroma (5%)
Rostov-on-Don (4%)
Saratov (4%)

** The pre-revolutionary development in Kaliningrad refers to everything constructed before the end of the First World War and the revolution in Germany.
But where can you still feel the spirit of imperial Russia?
You can find it where historical districts were preserved better. We tried assessing such a feature by counting pre-revolutionary buildings with more than 75% of the pre-revolutionary building footprint area in a 100 m radius.
Top 8 cities with the best preserved historical environment
The number of buildings within a radius of 100 meters from which 75% of the construction footage area was built before 1917.
Saint-Peterburg (11 000)
Moscow (4500)
Nizhny Novgorod (900)
Samara (600)
Astrakhan (500)
Kaliningrad (400)
Kazan (400)
Yaroslavl (350)
Tula (300)

Russia of Avant-garde

from 1918 to 1929
Shortly after the 1917 Revolution, Russia entered the era of the Soviet city. In the 1920s, mass housing construction had not yet begun due to economic reasons. However, in the capitals and growing industrial centres, buildings were constructed actively in the style of Constructivism.

This style gained popularity in Europe after World War I and was particularly developed in the USSR and Germany.
Top 8 cities with the largest total floor area of avant-garde period:
Moscow (7,6 mln m²)
Saint-Petersburg (1,8 mln m²)
Ivanovo (900 K m²)
Kaliningrad (810 K m²)
Yekaterinburg (800 K m²)
Rostov-on-Don (670 K m²)
Nizhny Novgorod (660 K m²)

– Ivanovo and Yekaterinburg took third and fifth place in the ranking. They are the cities whose avant-garde heritage is attracting increasing tourist interest nowadays.

– Kaliningrad remains fourth, where active housing construction took place during the Weimar Republic years.

– Nizhny Novgorod, ranked seventh, is known for its large worker settlements that emerged during this period.
It is important to remember that the values provided do not reflect the actual volume of construction in these years, as the data show the number of preserved buildings. At the same time, the number of subsequently demolished buildings is unknown.
Top 5 cities with the largest share of avant-garde period:
Kaliningrad (4%)
Ivanovo (4%)
Taganrog (2%)
Moscow (1,5%)
Rostov-on-Don (1,5%)

Post-revolutionary development still accounts for a significant share only in Ivanovo and Kaliningrad.

Next is Taganrog, where numerous individual estate houses appeared in the 1920s, followed by Moscow and Rostov-on-Don.

Russia of the 1930s

from 1930 to 1939
During this decade, architecture in cities saw a return to classical motifs, marking the avant-garde transformation into a post-constructivist style and the Empire style during Stalin's rule.
Top 6 cities with larges total floor area of the 1930s buildings:
Moscow (18 mln m²)
Saint-Petersburg (7,8 mln m²)
Nizhny Novgorod (4,6 mln m²)
Novosibirsk (1,8 mln m²)
Yekaterinburg (1,3 mln m²)
Samara (1,3 mln m²)
During these years, most buildings were erected in Moscow, where the reconstruction of the city centre began, as well as in St. Petersburg and Nizhny Novgorod – a major industrial centre of the USSR in the 1930s. Novosibirsk appears on the diagrams for the first time, as its active growth began precisely during this period.
A considerable portion of these buildings in non-capital cities is comprised not only of beautiful buildings but also of wooden one- and two-story residential barracks.
Top 8 cities with the largest share of 1930s buildings:
Nizhny Novgorod (6%)
Arkhangelsk (5%)
Ulan-Ude(4%)
Taganrog (4%)
Ivanovo (4%)
Murmansk (3%)
Moscow (3%)
Saint-Petersburg (3%)
Early Stalinist architecture still largely defines the appearance of the city centres of Nizhny Novgorod (more than 5%), Arkhangelsk, Ivanovo, Ulan-Ude, Moscow, and Murmansk. In Taganrog, estate-style houses were still being actively constructed in the 1930s.

War and after-war Russia

from 1940 to 1956
Late Stalinist architecture constitutes more than 10% of the buildings in Magnitogorsk and Nizhny Tagil – major industrial centres in the Urals. Also in the top ten are Volgograd, Novokuznetsk, Samara, Chelyabinsk, Ivanovo, Petrozavodsk, Bryansk, and Kemerovo.
Top 12 cities with the largest total floor area of war and after-war Russia:
Magnitogorsk (11%)
Nizhny Tagil (10,5%)
Volgograd (10%)
Novokuznetsk (8%)
Samara (7%)
Chelyabinsk (6%)
Ivanovo (6%)
Petrozavodsk (6%)
Bryansk (6%)
Kemerovo (6%)
Taganrog (6%)
Voronezh (6%)

Over the 26 years (1930-1956), the largest amount of Stalinist architecture in Russia can be found in Moscow, St. Petersburg, Volgograd, Nizhny Novgorod, Samara, Yekaterinburg, Novosibirsk, Perm, Chelyabinsk, and Omsk.

This era came to an end with the adoption of the decree "On the Elimination of Excesses in Design and Construction" in 1955.

Khrushchev Russia

from 1957 to 1964
The next era, the Khrushchev era, gave Russian cities a type of building whose name has been known to every inhabitant of the country since childhood—Khrushchevkas.
Top 8 cities with the largest share of khrushchev period:
Novokuznetsk (17%)
Volgograd (15%)
Tula (14%)
Nizhny Tagil (14%)
Murmansk (12%)
Magnitogorsk (12%)
Sterlitamak (12%)
Kemerovo (12%)
As expected, most of these buildings are in Moscow and St. Petersburg. Among the top five leaders are also Nizhny Novgorod (where the Gorky method – people's construction – originated in 1957), Perm, and Yekaterinburg.

Today, Khrushchyovka construction occupies the largest share of the industrial power in cities whose industrial power grew in the 1960s—Novokuznetsk, Volgograd, Tula, and Nizhny Tagil.

Brezhnev Russia and the era of stagnation

from 1965 to 1985
By the 1970s, the construction of multi-story (9 and higher) buildings began.
Top 8 cities with the largest share of Brezhnev period:
Murmansk (54%)
Kurgan (46%)
Naberezhnye Chelny (45%)
Volzhsky (44%)
Arkhangelsk (42%)
Nizhny Tagil (41%)
Vladimir (40%)
Cherepovets (39%)
More than half of all construction in Murmansk consists of buildings from 1965 to 1985.

A very high proportion is also found in Kurgan, Naberezhnye Chelny, Togliatti (both major late Soviet centres of automobile manufacturing, where a new modernist city-mega district emerged), Volzhsky, Arkhangelsk, Nizhny Tagil, and Vladimir.

Post-Perestroika Russia

from 1991 to 1999
In the 1990s, Russian urban development returned to market conditions; however, construction varied across different cities and regions due to economic reasons.
Top 8 cities with the largest share of post-Perestroika period (1991-1999):
Cheboksary (13%)
Belgorod (13%)
Lipetsk (12%)
Yakutsk (12%)
Yoshkar-Ola (12%)
Surgut (12%)
Tolyatti (12%)
Vologda (11%)
The post-perestroika era significantly influenced the appearance of cities in Cheboksary (where active population growth was observed), Belgorod, Lipetsk, Yakutsk, Yoshkar-Ola, Surgut, Togliatti, and Vologda.

In the 1990s, every tenth square meter of real estate was constructed in Voronezh, Tver, Bryansk, Tyumen, Stavropol, Oryol, Chita, and Kazan.
This decade marked the emergence of kaprom (capitalist romanticism) in Russian architecture.

Russia of 2000s

from 2000 to 2009
The 2000s were a time of post-crisis economic growth and simultaneously active construction in Russian cities.
Top 12 cities with the largest share of 2000s period:
Kazan (28%)
Khimki (25%)
Balashikha (22%)
Stavropol (20%)
Belgorod (20%)
Saint-Petersburg (19%)
Yakutsk (19%)
Tyumen (19%)
Kaliningrad (18%)
Podolsk (18%)
Tomsk (18%)
Grozny (18%)
This era left the most noticeable impact on Kazan, the Moscow suburbs of Khimki, Balashikha, Podolsk, Stavropol, Belgorod, St. Petersburg, Yakutsk, Tyumen, Grozny, Kaliningrad, and Tomsk. In these cities, approximately every fifth to the sixth square meter was built 15-20 years ago, and every fourth square meter in the centre of the Tatarstan region!

Russia of 2010s

from 2010 to 2020
During this period, new typologies of construction emerged, and old ones were extended vertically. Additionally, there was a continued boom in individual housing construction.
Top 9 cities with the largest share of 2010s period:
Krasnodar (55%)
Sochi (47%)
Makhachkala (44%)
Balashikha (43%)
Novorossiysk (41%)
Khimki (40%)
Tyumen (37%)
Stavropol (36%)
Surgut (35%)
Over half of the buildings in Krasnodar were constructed in the last decade. In Sochi, Makhachkala, Balashikha, and Novorossiysk, the share of the total area of new buildings exceeds 40%.
Post-Soviet construction, as expected, makes up gigantic shares in the mentioned cities.

Particularly noteworthy are the cities where two out of three or every second square meter of real estate was built after 1991.
Top 15 cities with the largest share of 1991-2020 period:
Krasnodar (75%)
Khimki (70%)
Balashikha (69%)
Sochi (68%)
Tyumen (66%)
Makhachkala (66%)
Stavropol (66%)
Yakutsk (64%)
Surgut (63%)
Novorossiysk (59%)
Kaliningrad (55%)
Podolsk (54%)
Kazan (54%)
Belgorod (52%)
Novosibirsk (51%)

Where do Russians live?

Throughout this time, we've been looking at figures on urban development without distinguishing between types of buildings. This raises the question: in what kinds of buildings do most Russians live?

Most Russians live in multi-apartment buildings, the distribution of which by periods differs little from the overall figures for all buildings.
In the largest cities, every third resident lives in a five—or nine-storey building from the Khrushchev or Brezhnev era.

The five-story apartment buildings from the 1960s still remain the most common type of housing.
At the same time, there is an interesting exception to pre-revolutionary buildings. Almost every fifth square meter in the multi-apartment buildings of St. Petersburg was constructed before 1917. Such indicators are not even close to any other city in Russia (in Moscow, it's just slightly over one percent).

– In Astrakhan, Rostov-on-Don, and Vladikavkaz, almost 5% of housing is from the pre-revolutionary period.

– In Kaliningrad, the pre-war German residential stock (before 1945) collectively makes up more than 10%.
Top 12 cities with the largest share of pre-revolutionary housing:
Saint-Petersburg (17%)
Astrakhan (4%)
Rostov-on-Don (4%)
Vladikavkaz (4%)
Kaliningrad (3%)
Kostroma (3%)
Tomsk (3%)
Tambov (3%)
Makhachkala (2,5%)
Saratov (2,5%)
Chita (2,5%)
Samara (2,5%)

P.S.

Our data is open and available as an online map or could be downloaded. We hope that it will be useful to a wide audience and that many interesting insights can be caught from it, despite the presence of some inaccuracies.

The analysis in this article represents a preliminary examination, just an attempt to explore the dataset. It has its limitations and issues, which I have described in detail in the article about the entire collection and processing.

I would be happy to receive comments and feedback!
I want to say thank you to:

– Sasha Kachkaev – for the idea of ​​the all-Russian wonder script, its development and implementation, for supporting the code and me throughout the entire data collection process;
the team of Geosemantica — for their invaluable technical assistance in collecting data and their fantastic data web visualization skills;
all the authors of the 14 age maps of buildings, whose experience laid the foundation for the all-Russian project;
– Nikita Slavin – for founding the project and supporting it every step of the way.