The thing I like of soviet apartments is that the toilet is in a separated room from the bathroom, to me that's genius))
@arturoid7763 жыл бұрын
I agree it's good when many people live there, but then... you clean the door handle everytime you leave the bathroom? It's not hygienic imo but good idea whatsoever.
@tomwayne48593 жыл бұрын
@@arturoid776 The basin should always go with the toilet for hygiene reasons. The bathroom can simply have a shower and bathtub.
@andr_sh3 жыл бұрын
@@arturoid776 well to have bad air in the bathroom is also not hygienic. So when I first saw the 'European' style toilets I was surprised. Unfortunately now its a standard in russia
@ЭЮЯ-о3к3 жыл бұрын
@@andr_sh Now apartments with two toilets are being built in Russia
@MacIn1733 жыл бұрын
It depends on the flat size actually. Typical soviet 1-room flat, like 35m2 often has combined toilet+bathroom. 2+room flats have them separated, yes.
@twilightshadow17953 жыл бұрын
The little house in the garden that keeps plants warm is called a greenhouse in English. And thank you to your friends for letting us see their apartments!
@Halloween6-63 жыл бұрын
Столько раз был в Европе , но в Россию всегда тянет … Родина - она такая😌
@sercangungor35793 жыл бұрын
Привет Fedor, ты самый лучший и симпатичный и успешный и умный учитель 👨🏫 которого я когда-либо видел в своей жизни, я 6 месяцев назад начал изучать русский язык я беру частный урок один раз в неделю, и в этo время встречал твой ютубе канал, я почти посмотрел все твои видео здесь, это было очень полезно, я хочу попросить у тебя чтобы сделать видео о комплименте на Руском языке, я буду очень рад, я желаю тебе всего хорошего ты прекрасный человек
@zerobi94683 жыл бұрын
Watching this, I noticed a surprising amount of similarities between Russian apartments and Japanese ones. Small three-room apartments are also common here in Japan - the only noticeable difference from looking at it is that in Japanese ones, one or more of the rooms often have tatami flooring. It's even similar to the point where we take our shoes off at the entrance.
@tanmoyp6272 жыл бұрын
Lol the Indian apartments are just a copy
@rubensaraujobarboza13083 жыл бұрын
Thank you Fedor, i always enjoy know how is the things, houses, people in other countries especially in russia. I'm trying learn russian language by myself and all aspects of culture are nice to know. Thank you 👍😃🇧🇷🇷🇺😃👍
@brigittemontet79213 жыл бұрын
Tout à fait d'accord avec votre remarque. Aussi, j aime bien qu ils fassent beaucoup de choses par eux même. Saine tradition, donnant une bonne mentalité de base. Et cuisiner soi-même est plus sain en plus de développer une meilleure convivialité. Encore une fois, merci Fedor, vous expliquez très bien. Et si je peux me permettre, quel beau type de Sibérien vous faites, votre petite femme a vraiment de la chance. Compliments 🇫🇷
@rubensaraujobarboza13083 жыл бұрын
@@brigittemontet7921 Bonjour Brigitte, j'adore votre commentaire. Vous étiez très sincère en flirtant avec Fedor. J'aime ça chez une femme. Câlins du Brésil 🤗🇧🇷❤🇫🇷🤗
@brigittemontet79213 жыл бұрын
@@rubensaraujobarboza1308 Ah Ah..,! Ruben, alors je flirte avec Fedor ?.... Vous êtes trop mignon !. C est gentil votre remarque. Quand j étais plus jeune, on disait que j étais une " séductrice née".. Comme quoi, cela ne passe pas, même avec le temps. Pauvre Fedor, j espère que je ne l ai pas mis mal à l'aise ?.. Pourtant j avais bien pris soin de préciser que j étais une " old Lady". De toutes façons il ne répond jamais. Je pense pourtant que dans sa famille, on doit connaître le français. Ils semblent être des gens cultivés. Quant à vous, parlez moi un peu du Brésil.. Brigitte Montet 🇫🇷
@Ghost514922 жыл бұрын
As someone that was born in Serbia before moving to the US at the age of 9, I can definitely say that everything in this video reminds me of Serbia. From the buildings to the traditions , it’s all very similar. Obviously I know our cultures are similar in many ways but geez I didn’t know it was this similar. Awesome video my friend, just found your channel.
@bermcannonk3 жыл бұрын
It would be cool to see "newer" development style apartments. To see if Russia's design style has changed?
@ymmv993 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info has a number of videos on how Russians live. New apartments ... kzbin.info/www/bejne/oGKWh6Z3jJaZapY Homes in Russia ... kzbin.info/www/bejne/h6vRfYF8raiDb9U Russian countryside ... kzbin.info/www/bejne/Z5fHeWN7oddqbw How they lived in the past ... kzbin.info/www/bejne/hXfGmKKdna54i9E
@arinajensen96353 жыл бұрын
Newer apartments are just like the American and European modern apartments. White/grey walls, normal floor...
@noco7243 Жыл бұрын
@@arinajensen9635 do they have a name for them like they do with the Krushevkas?
@MMSugranyes3 жыл бұрын
You really have affluent English. I’m amazed. I can read Russian words but I don’t understand them with some exception. The bathroom is awesome.
@statinskill3 жыл бұрын
You mean he speaks fluent English, but let's hope that his Russian classes will make him affluent. You were schooled in English by a German.
@createpassionlove3 жыл бұрын
Easy mistake if you are learning English. Affluent - from a wealthy family. Fluent - speaking almost like a native "Flowing language"
@ЭЮЯ-о3к3 жыл бұрын
@@createpassionlove Russia has very high educational standards. Children study foreign languages at school from 1st to 11th grade.
@RapidCycling073 жыл бұрын
Awesome video bro! Thank you for sharing! Россия #1! 🇷🇺
@litolito18933 жыл бұрын
I love the separate bathrooms and the side door entrance. Beautiful garden, and I'm so impressed with the concept of designing and building your own house 👍🏻
@marizeinn3 жыл бұрын
I think i’ve seen this house and garden before in one of your old videos 😆. I’ve been learning russian for quite a while now and recently discovered this channel. Great content 🤩
@robetheridge69992 жыл бұрын
The one thing I can never get used to with many European houses (I have lived in Croatia, Cyprus, Germany, and Romania) is the closed off feeling from the Gates hiding the yard. In America, most back yard are private, but the openess of a front porch to sit on and greet others is more preferable to me.
@LopsideMakes Жыл бұрын
They have guns (sometimes) so if a bad person is at the door, they have protection, so generally even with high crime rates communities are still open. I think culturally because of guns, it has made it more possible for people to feel safe, of course it is controversial and not everyone agrees.
@evaskjerd11 ай бұрын
We never wear shoes inside the house in norway as well🙏👍and I love this tradition🙏👏
@davids_blog13 жыл бұрын
Fedor I love the series
@ranadebray54403 жыл бұрын
Very nice 👍 showing of the different apartments. 👏👏👏
@josephk9992 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Fedor, I enjoyed the video! Im curious are the gates in front of the houses tradition or are there valid security concerns? Gates at the very front like that are almost unseen here where I live in California but we have plenty of thieving. My parents live in a sought after neighborhood in a $1.6 million house yet all their patio furniture was stolen last month and my laptop was taken from my car in their driveway last year, almost no one has front gates around here. Perhaps gates like that would be a good idea here in California haha.
@latestlindsey56202 жыл бұрын
You're the first Russian I've ever seen who pronounces vegatable like an American 😂 great video, very interesting info for me discuss with my language partner
@johnrobinson44453 жыл бұрын
I live in a 1968-vintage apartment in Japan. Fairly similar. Beautiful? No, not really. But the neighborhood is nice and convenient and it suits our needs.
@thetrillianaire2 жыл бұрын
Great video. Something I found really interesting is that, since in the Soviet Union housing was basically socialized, when the USSR collapsed and there was a switch to capitalism, in the process of privatizing everything, people basically became the owner of whatever place they happened to live in. Wherever you were, that's what you got. When I studied in Russia, my host mom was living in an Khrushevka apartment that she'd inherited from her parents, who'd become its owners in the process of privatization. She and all her neighbors were always doing ремонт, so the apartments often looked quite different on the inside even though the buildings looked the same on the outside. As I understand it, the Khrushevka apartment buildings were meant to be a temporary fix - build lots of buildings quickly so that multiple families no longer had to live together in one apartment (which imo was a better solution to a housing shortage than having some families be homeless), and then it seemed like the plan was to continue to improve housing options from there. But once the USSR collapsed and privatization, the govt doesn't have the same responsibilities to provide housing as it did. So tons of buildings meant to be temporary are still being used.
@laurengreaves11 Жыл бұрын
Is it not the same like in Minsk, Belarus? Because I have been there. Lived there for 2 months.
@jip2303 жыл бұрын
Congratulations on your move back home to Russia and the strong growth of your channel on KZbin!
@eastslavs9603 жыл бұрын
скажу так смотрю тебя чтобы подтянуть свой английский на слух и скажу такую вещь когда русский говорить на английском я все понимаю когда американец говорит по английский я понимаю половину кратко спасибо тебе за крутой контент аще делай видосы на улице
@SpankyHam3 жыл бұрын
родной акцент дает +100500 к пониманию - когда русские поют на английском например все в разы понятнее.
@victoria_m132 жыл бұрын
попробуй смотреть американцев с англ субтитрами. я иногда так делаю, когда акцент не понятен. потом можно отключать сабы и слушать, главное, чтобы это был один человек (у них акценты от штата к штату меняются). со временем уже больше новых разных акцентов будешь нормально понимать сходу :)
@roblesd13 жыл бұрын
Hi Fedor. Forgive me for asking, but are you an Orthodox Christian? Would you show us the Russian Orthodox Church? How intense is the Russian religious life? David
@MrRettry3 жыл бұрын
Russia is a pretty big country =) There's many different religions here, but the most popular is orthodox christianity (about 60% percent) and islam (about 7%). 14-15% of people in Russia are atheists (young people mostly). Speaking about an orthodox christians - not really much people goes to church every Sunday. More of them does it on a big christian holidays. Especially on easter, to consecrate easter eggs and kulich (a special easter cake). Also there's a big church service on Christmas (Orthodox christians selebrate Christmas on January 7) and Epiphany (you've seen all this youtube videos with all these russians swimming in the ice cold water). Most of christian people here in Russia goes to church from time to time to baptize their children, to confess their sins, to take communion, to pray for the health of their living loved ones or for the peacefull rest of the ones who had passed away.
@spider.monkey.ninja.assassin2 жыл бұрын
I'd like to point out to non Russian viewers that the house Fedya is showing is pretty large by Russian standards - well, the yard and all its amenities, anyway. Also, not all Russians do banya. That's definitely a colder regions thing. As a South Russian I've been to a banya maybe once in my life, and it was a banya that someone rents out in their yard. In south Russia there isn't much of a need for them. It does get cold in the winter, but not nearly as cold as Siberia or even Moscow region. Our yards here are often smaller, as houses tend to be quite crammed into a street, unless you have a bunch of money for a large property. But, of course, also, my hometown is about 320 years old (older than the US?) so it's a very old town layout. Generally people can expand the yard if they have the money to buy two adjacent properties and combine them. Plus, a lot of the houses here are pre/post world war 2 era builds - Adobe overlaid with brick. People who have more money do knock down old houses and build new ones, but most people I know live in old houses and keep improving them over time.
@helloone50673 жыл бұрын
You make very intresting videos Thank you!
@GUTOMOFFICIAL3 жыл бұрын
Very interesting! Nice series!
@jeffsnider35883 жыл бұрын
Do Russians have heavy duty socks to prevent wearing holes while in your house walking around?
@peanut36453 жыл бұрын
Human legs are strong enough to walk barefoot on grass, wood or stone. We usually wear slippers so as not to get dirty
@jeffsnider35883 жыл бұрын
Ok, thanks since I am from Alabama guess i would go bare foot 😆 I do know Forrest Gump
@djsal77693 жыл бұрын
In USA we have a huge homeless population especially in California where cities a filled with homeless encampments where it looks like a slum along with lots and lots of drug addicts on the streets in major cities like San Francisco and Los Angeles.
@MrRettry3 жыл бұрын
If you are homeless in Russia, you would probbably die in winter. It's simple=).
@FunVanDriver3 жыл бұрын
The Metro in Moscow is so much cleaner and free of homeless people compared to New York City. I couldn't help but think about how full of homeless people the underpasses would be if it were New York, but there were hardly any. Not to say it's non-existent; I did see a few, but nothing close to what you see in America. Not sure how true it is, but while I was there, somebody did say to me that the Police basically collect homeless people and relocate them away from the city center.
@createpassionlove3 жыл бұрын
@@FunVanDriver It's illegal to be homeless" a native girl told me...don't know how that can enforced.
@ЭЮЯ-о3к3 жыл бұрын
@@MrRettry There are few homeless people in Russia, because all Russians received free apartments during the Soviet era. Russians become homeless only as a result of the actions of scammers who take their apartments. But there are state shelters for the homeless. And all churches and monasteries give shelter to the homeless.
@MrRettry3 жыл бұрын
@@ЭЮЯ-о3к I know, i live in Russia, i'm just kidding)
@jaraoscar3 жыл бұрын
Cool video!
@dicasrapidas57242 жыл бұрын
In your channel we can be fluent in English too
@stevekollios62922 жыл бұрын
I love it!
@createpassionlove3 жыл бұрын
Where (which city) was the scene with the overhead view of a bunch of houses?
@MacIn1733 жыл бұрын
Any.
@011nbg3 жыл бұрын
Pozdrav iz 🇷🇸🇷🇸🇷🇸🇷🇸
@maryreynolds53102 жыл бұрын
So very interesting, thank you for sharing this. I’m curious about the cost of living, and do you pay electric, gas, water and sewer bills? Ok, so a very important question..I’m from the states, I’m curious about how people feel about us, one..two, how do you and large percentage of others in Russia feel about V Putin? Or, can you even talk about this? Some countries people have to be careful at what they say, do etc as others watch. I would love to know..if you had a choice to live anywhere in the world, where would you choose? Thank you so much for your time! I hope you actually see this too..lol
@ВалентинЛаптев-о6ц2 жыл бұрын
Yes we pay for electricity, gas and water + heating and home repair and maintenance fee. Оn average, paying just for a two-room apartment with a separate kitchen in Moscow costs 4,000-6,000 rubles (70-100 dollars at the current exchange rate), depending on the season and consumption (three people live in my apartment). Usually payment goes to the address of one management company. But nothing prevents you from installing meters for gas, electricity and water and paying for it directly to suppliers. The installation of meters must be coordinated with the relevant supplier company, and usually the meter itself is installed and sealed by a specialist. They only recommend meter models, but if you don’t want to go to hardware stores, you can often buy directly from the supplier. Now for this it is enough to send data and pay through the Internet site, and not, as before, to stand in line at the cashier. Therefore, now people have begun to put counters more actively. On the whole, a positive attitude towards Putin. Without fanaticism. But you need to understand that the opposition in Russia is not as good as it is shown in the West. Navalny is actually a corrupt official and a Nazi in the past. Who also betrayed his supporters in 2012. And most people except young people remember this. Therefore, in general, only students went to rallies for him, and even then not all of them. The rest of the opposition is a real trash full of freaks. This is more due to the fact that without very big money in Russia it is very, very difficult to move forward in politics. And it’s not about corruption, it’s not the 90s now, and it makes no sense to offer anyone a bribe for a position (although sometimes this happens, but very rarely). It's about advertising and election campaigning. It's just that parliamentary parties are financed directly from the state budget. The rest are offered to look for money on their own. In terms of freedom of speech in Russia, only public support for fascism and Nazism (including the display of symbols), extremism and public support for terrorism and terrorist activities on the territory of the Russian Federation are condemned. Such statements are subject to administrative and criminal penalties. As far as I know, there are penalties for this in the US and almost all of Europe. So I don't see anything special here. I would move to the south of Russia near the Black Sea, where there is a warm subtropical climate. But there are no such good salaries as in Moscow for my specialty.
@ekaterina.galkinaa6 ай бұрын
As for our president, I would answer that the majority are simply accustomed to him and they are afraid to change anything, plus there are no worthy candidates. Attitudes towards him are different. There are many who believe the propaganda and love it very much. Some people see its pros and cons, others criticize it.
@HiyayaHo3 жыл бұрын
Would have been great if you could speak more Russian with English subtitles
@remylebeau6683 Жыл бұрын
Its like watching Romanian apartments 😅 ❤
@raugust67863 жыл бұрын
When you build your own houses, do you do the electrical and plumbing work yourselves, too or do you hire electricians or plumbers to do that work for you?
@BeFluentinRussian3 жыл бұрын
Sometimes people even do those things themselves. If the issue is too complicated, we can call a professional.
@raugust67863 жыл бұрын
@@BeFluentinRussian That's how some are in the U.S. as well, but in some places here, it is illegal to do electrical or plumbing work yourself unless you're a licensed professional. Thanks for the reply!
@MacIn1733 жыл бұрын
@@raugust6786 "it is illegal to do electrical or plumbing work yourself unless you're a licensed professional" not in Russia - god bless. It is all your personal responsibility. Sure that you know how to handle wrench and screwdriver? Go on. You don't? Hire someone. Fire starts? Well, firefighters would help you out, but it is still your fault. And if you screw up with plumbing in apartment building and flood others, you'd pay. You can find TONES of educational videos in russian segment of youtube about electric work, plumbing, laying bricks, making roofs, foundations - everything you need etc. Sp, if you're wealthy, you can hire someone, if you're poor or middle - you learn how to do things yourself and pay this tribute with your lifetime.
@raugust67863 жыл бұрын
@@MacIn173 that’s interesting. We have a lot of big box hardware stores, so there are many people who do work themselves but there are states or cities where it’s illegal to do some work yourself. I personally wouldn’t feel comfortable doing electrical myself even with a good video to learn. I’d find a friend or colleague who knows more help out. In the US, apartment maintenance is the owner or landlord’s problem since you pay rent and don’t own the place. I rent and my water heater broke and had a few minor issues. I just texted my land lord or our maintenance guy and they took care of it.
@MacIn1733 жыл бұрын
@@raugust6786 "In the US, apartment maintenance is the owner or landlord’s problem since you pay rent and don’t own the place" In Russia, most of the people (I'd assume like 80-90%) do own their flats and houses. This is a heritage of the USSR - all state-owned previously leased flats were privatized for free in 90s. So in Russia you are the owner, who is going to fix stuff :) The "do it yourself" thing is also heritage of USSR - we were forced to reallocate resources into production rather than into services. So such things as reparing flats, repairing cars etc were much more on shoulders of citizens, and this cultural pattern still prevales. Other thing comes into play: to hire a professional, you need to earn enough money (in best case - more than he does) to hire him. While most of the people don't earn enough to hire others. If you earn as much as plumber, you can't hire him. Labor productivity is quite low here. So the option is to learn yourself, how to do things. It is treated to be kind of a man's sign in the culture: being handy and able to mend things. It is clearly a sign of outdated culture and econimic indeed, but we are what we are.
@hatefuleight67003 жыл бұрын
Nice
@stayoutofthecitys3 жыл бұрын
Do this but for homes in the country in Russia .
@ЭЮЯ-о3к3 жыл бұрын
Yes, there are very good new villages in Russia now.
@Anastasia-xh9uz3 жыл бұрын
Я явно с вами прокачаю свой английский на слух. 😉🌠
@mrflugenheim15073 жыл бұрын
How do we use "вы" in russian?
@SubSovereign3 жыл бұрын
It's the second person plural pronoun ("you") and also the formal "you" for people you are not close with - when used with a verb, the verb gets the second person plural ending as appropriate.
@nullbeyondo2 жыл бұрын
By default, always use ты, and when you feel like you want *to address someone with respect, use вы.* You'd use вы a lot but that doesn't make it the default. Some other tips: - Memorize sentences, not words. You'd get the deeper meaning after building a big mental database of them. - Find yourself some russian group who happen to have the same interests as you and hang out with them. - It is okay if you understood nothing at first, having the same interests means you'd hear familiar words. - Always record everything whenever you go out and write it down later like a dialogue at home to train your hearing. - Oh and don't shake hands with girls but if a girl shakes hands or hugs you, it is ok. Note: Some times, you might meet strangers on the streets telling you something in russian with a rap god-level speed, don't be discouraged and try to make sense out of it with your recording at home or ask a russian friend to write it for you. Or cut the recording short and send it in VK chat and it'll automatically trigger the speech-to-text AI (really good AI module at that).
@ИмперияДобра-е9с3 жыл бұрын
Dudes in Russia never give candy to another dude, never, you hear! Better get the bro a beer!
@marizeinn3 жыл бұрын
Younger generations prefer beer now over vodka? Just curious
@MrRettry3 жыл бұрын
@@marizeinn Yep, young people in Russia basically doesn't drink vodka at all.
@vixregon3 жыл бұрын
@@marizeinn yeah, vodka is kinda agressive alcohol, and more part of us drink some simple cocktail (whiskey+lemonade like a cola for example) or cheap beer (near 1-2$ for 0,5L) if we want to do it.
@BVLTIKA33 жыл бұрын
@@marizeinn все кто пьют/пили водку подтвердят что пиво ofc лучше
@KarmaFlight3 жыл бұрын
I think that is your dog. 🙂
@helenwood53643 жыл бұрын
So, a handy man will be the best choice of the ladies.
@MacIn1733 жыл бұрын
Heh, another good old anecdote: "Mother says to a daughter: look at your father - he is so good, he can repair anything! So, remember, daughter: do not marry such man: you won't buy anything new ever".
@helenwood53643 жыл бұрын
@@MacIn173 So the daughter got the idea : as long as he brings u more money it doesnt matter he is handy or not. if he has no money, not handy, off he goes. lol
@MacIn1733 жыл бұрын
@@helenwood5364 erm it is not so much about the money. It is about life position "do not spend money on new, if old one can be repared", regardless to wealthyness.
@nullbeyondo2 жыл бұрын
@@helenwood5364 It really has nothing to do with money. It is about the mindset that he could always just repair the old stuff and never buy anything new for her or the family. So the joke is the mom telling her daughter to marry a man who cannot repair things so he'd always buy new stuff. Hope it is clear
@FirstLast-ce3en3 жыл бұрын
We have greenhouses Fedor haha
@ranadebray54403 жыл бұрын
Private houses are the best.
@ЭЮЯ-о3к3 жыл бұрын
Many Russians live in private homes.
@evaskjerd11 ай бұрын
Russian culture/tradition is NOT so different from norwegian culture👍
@rengg14413 жыл бұрын
лучше бы такие выпуски на русском с русскими субтитрами
@stevekollios62922 жыл бұрын
So much better than ny appartments
@twoturntables91532 жыл бұрын
No mobile homes? 🧐🤣🤣
@FageNusOfficial2 жыл бұрын
О та самая пятиэтажка
@ytgfy3 жыл бұрын
Ахаха иностранцы восхищаются хрущевкой хD
@vixregon3 жыл бұрын
Слушай, ну кроме шуток. В своё время, в то, дальнее далёко, это действительно было удобным жильём. Всё есть, всё на месте, жить можно. Конечно, сейчас от них стараются избавляться, они как строения устарели и имеют кучу проблем с коммуникациями и всем остальным.
@lenadima51683 жыл бұрын
@@vixregon конечно, для того времени это было прорывом. Миллионы людей получили квартиры в этих домах. И микрорайоны были продуманными, с магазинами, школами, детскими садами.
@olivesaintpetersburgrussia31013 жыл бұрын
🤓
@erikakat18123 жыл бұрын
First!
@zavulon4223 жыл бұрын
I'm hunting -wabbits- pervonakhs. And you're my prey :)