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Inside the Lavish Khrushchev Apartment: A Tale of Excess

Money can’t buy good taste.

Repairs are expensive. And not always stylish. At least if the owner wants to arrange a local “expensive-rich” in his Khrushchev-era apartment.

Stucco molding, gilding and creepy roses look strange in average apartments. It seems that the cramped rooms were filled with furniture from half the museums of St. Petersburg and sprinkled with Swarovski crystals on top. However, fewer words – see for yourself.

This boudoir of the empress has clearly seen a lot in its lifetime. And he will see more.

However, like the rest of the apartment. Forged partitions behind which the vacuum cleaner coquettishly hides are chic of the highest order.

London? Paris? No, Khrushchev in Izhevsk.

The renovation was done on a grand scale. They even decorated the refrigerator, but for some reason they left lumpy linoleum on the floor.

Kitchen. Take a closer look at the bread bin and detergent container. Even the little things were taken into account.

Break for modern. Or kitsch. Or… Perhaps Andy Warhol would have difficulty defining this. And the creepy roses on the ceiling would have impressed even Olga Ryzhova.

Let’s return to imperial luxury. On such a bed, perhaps, only a person of noble blood will sleep peacefully; the rest will not even dare to lie down.

Shiny gilded mosaic tiles in the bathroom, and even half mirrored? Well, you can lay out the walls from floor to ceiling. No one will say that the interior looks poor.

Floral madness can leave a mark on the souls of avid lovers of Provence and other shabby chic. It’s even strange that there are no roses and tulips on the floor.

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