“When the apartments were distributed, some even received two. Renovation: what they promised and what they received. Which apartments will be moved from five-story buildings to?

Which houses will be demolished in 2017-2018 as part of the “first wave” in different areas?

North-Eastern Administrative District (21 houses)

Maryina Roshcha area:

Annenskaya st., 6,

Sheremetyevskaya st., 31, building 1, 8.

Sheremetyevskaya st., 31, building 2.

District Ostankino:

Godovikova st., 10, building 1, building 2.

South Medvedkovo District:

Dezhneva Ave., 8, Dezhneva Ave., 22, building 1,

Milashenkova st., 7, bldg. 3,

Fonvizina st., 11,

Molodtsova str., 17, building 1,

Molodtsova str., 25, building 1,

Molodtsova st., 33, bldg. 1,

Polyarnaya st., 5, building 2,

Yasny Ave., 16, bldg. 2.

Butyrsky District:

Yablochkova st., 22, bldg. 1, bldg. 2, bldg. 3,

Yablochkova st., 18, bldg. 3, bldg. 4,

Yablochkova st., 20, bldg. 2,

Dobrolyubova st., no. 17.

Eastern administrative district (2 houses)

Sokolina Gora area:

Kirpichnaya st., 49.

Perovo District:

Plyushcheva st., 15, bldg. 3.

South-Western Administrative District (5 houses)


Konkovo ​​district:

Profsoyuznaya st., 98, building 3, building 4, building 6, building 7, bldg. 8.

Western Administrative District (39 houses)


Kuntsevo district:

Academician Pavlova st., building 32,

Academician Pavlova st. 34,

Academician Pavlova st. 36,

Academician Pavlova st. 38,

Academician Pavlova st. 40,

Academician Pavlova st. 54,

Academician Pavlova str. 56 building 1,

Yartsevskaya st., 27, building 5,

Yartsevskaya st., 31, building 2.

Yartsevskaya st., 31, building 3,

Yartsevskaya st., 31, room 6.

District Prospekt Vernadskogo:

Leninsky Prospekt, 110, building 4,

Koshtoyantsa st., no. 19,

Koshtoyantsa st., no. 27,

Koshtoyantsa st., no. 37,

Koshtoyantsa st., no. 9,

Lobachevskogo st., no. 84.

Fili-Davydkovo:

Kastanaevskaya st., 61, bldg. 1,

Kastanaevskaya st., 61, bldg. 2,

Kastanaevskaya st., 63, bldg. 1.

Malaya Filevskaya st., 22,

Malaya Filevskaya st., 24, bldg. 1,

Malaya Filevskaya st., 24, bldg. 2,

Malaya Filevskaya st., 24, bldg. 3,

Davydkovskaya st., 10, building 1,

Davydkovskaya st., 10, building 2,

Davydkovskaya st., 10, building 3,

Davydkovskaya st., 10, building 4,

Davydkovskaya st., 12, building 1,

Davydkovskaya st., 12, building 2,

Davydkovskaya st., 12, building 4,

Davydkovskaya st., 12, building 5,

Davydkovskaya st., 2, building 7,

Davydkovskaya st., 4, building 1,

Davydkovskaya st., 4, building 2,

Davydkovskaya st., 4, building 3,

Kremenchugskaya st., 5, building 1,

Slavyansky Blvd., 9, building 3,

Slavyansky Blvd., 9, building 4,

Northwestern Administrative District (4 houses)


Khoroshevo-Mnevniki district:

Marshala Zhukova proezd, 35, building 2,

Marshala Zhukova proezd, 51, building 4,

People's Militia Street, 13, building 3,

People's Militia Street 13, building 4.

The material is based on the personal experience of the editorial staff, as well as on commentsHead of practice of the legal group "MIP" Svetlana Modestova-Horst and leading manager of the secondary housing department of the real estate agency "Azbuka Zhilya" Alexander Lunin.

Data on demolished houses was taken from the website of the Moscow Department of Urban Development Policy.

Do they provide any free moving assistance?

In principle, they can provide you with a car and loaders. But you will have to sign up for a waiting list, which can last for a month. Plus, the type of vehicle may not always allow you to transport large-sized furniture. And the accuracy of the loaders in this case is not guaranteed.

In fact, most migrants prefer to use commercial carriers and pay for the move out of their own pockets.

Are renovations planned for new apartments?

Yes, apartments are renovated upon relocation. However, its quality depends on the integrity of the developer. Typically, a typical renovation involves wallpaper on the walls (and sometimes on the ceiling), linoleum or laminate on the floor, and the presence of working sockets. The kitchen has a sink with mixer tap and electric stove, and a tiled apron in the work area. The bathroom has a sink with mixer tap, toilet and steel bathtub. But there may not be wall tiles in the bathroom, so the new owners will have to take on this part of the finishing themselves.

When can I register in a new apartment?

It will be possible to register in a new apartment only after receiving all the documents from Rosreestr. Until then, the person remains registered in the old house, even if everyone has already moved out of the house and it has been prepared for demolition.

At what point do you need to pay utilities for a new apartment and do you have to pay for the old one?

After inspecting and accepting the new apartment, the tenant is obliged to provide data on water meters (which were removed by the inspector) to the local multifunctional center (MFC) within a few days, along with a copy of the exchange agreement. From this moment on, the new owner begins to be charged for the new apartment, but he is also obliged to pay utilities for the old one.

A tenant can stop paying for an old apartment only after officially handing over the keys to it to inspectors, who, in turn, issue the new owner with the appropriate document, which must be taken to the MFC and Mosenergosbyt OJSC. After this, the tenant has the right not to pay for the old apartment (although the rent for it will be charged for some time, but you can no longer pay attention to this).

But problems may arise with paying for electricity in a new apartment, since the execution of an agreement between your management company and the resource supply organization (the same JSC Mosenergosbyt) may be delayed for a number of reasons. Accordingly, Mosenergosbyt will not be able to issue electricity bills directly, and the management company may not bother to issue bills on its own. As a result, the migrants will be faced with a situation where for a year or two or three they will not receive electricity bills at all, and then in one fell swoop they will be charged a debt for this entire period. So here the residents will have to fiddle with the management code on their own and keep their finger on the pulse.

What do you need to know about water and electricity meters in apartments?Water and electricity meters have become commonplace for many apartment owners, but the issues related to their operation are not becoming less frequent. The RIA Real Estate website decided to answer the most common of them.

Will they inspect the apartment for defects?

Based on a copy of the exchange agreement, residents receive the keys to the apartment and first of all go to “accept” it. To do this, you need to catch special inspectors who, together with the new owners, will inspect the apartment for construction defects, and also take and record water meter readings.

Detected deficiencies are recorded in the acceptance certificate and entered by inspectors in a special journal. Based on this, the developer is obliged to eliminate the defect. In fact, the residents themselves will have to catch the foreman tied to the object and discuss with him when and how the troubleshooting will take place.

Some things can be done very quickly, for example, replacing a window frame. But you can wait a month for a new mixer.

How much money will you have to spend on paperwork?

When drawing up an exchange agreement, you will have to pay a state fee (2 thousand rubles), as well as notary services for drawing up the necessary package of documents, for example, a power of attorney for a representative of the DGI (this power of attorney allows the DGI to draw up documents for residents, so that they do not have to go anywhere themselves, a regular practice).

Note: after final registration and receipt of all documents, residents have the right to contact the DGI with a request to reimburse the costs of processing documents (state duty). The money is transferred to your savings book or bank card within a month. But for this you need to save the receipt.

How long will it take to complete the paperwork and when can I move?

After inspecting the apartment and signing consent for it, residents will have to wait for the exchange agreement to be prepared and the invitation to be signed. The DGI usually promises that it will take 1-1.5 months. However, in fact, this period may last for several months, since documents are submitted for processing in parts and are also returned in parts. You also need to remember that errors may be made in the documents and they will have to be sent back for correction, and this will take additional time (from several days to several weeks).

After signing the exchange agreement, residents are given a copy of it, while the original goes for registration. From now on, they are allowed to move and make repairs.

Registration of documents with Rosreestr can take several months (on average six months).

Run, Marina, run: chronicles of one move from an emergency Khrushchev buildingRelocation from emergency and dilapidated housing is a long-awaited phenomenon for many people, but it is necessary to prepare for it thoroughly, and begin with strengthening the nervous system. Chief editor of the RIA Real Estate portal Marina Zabludovskaya spoke about her experience of moving from a demolished Khrushchev building.

Is it possible to choose an apartment when moving or do you take what you give?

At the very beginning, residents are invited to receive an inspection pass, which gives them the right to come to the new building and look at their future home.

The inspection ticket already contains the house address and apartment number. With this coupon, you go to the new building, where a representative of the developer (he usually sits on the first floor of one of the entrances of the new building) gives you a key to the apartment (the coupon is taken as a deposit for the duration of the inspection).

For inspection, a strict and not very convenient period of time is allocated for working people on weekdays, so get ready to take time off from work. After the inspection, you hand over the key and take the inspection coupon to your DGI.

Residents are not allowed to choose an apartment! You can either refuse or sign an agreement for the apartment indicated on the coupon.

In case of failure, DGI usually offers two scenario options:

1. You wait until someone else refuses housing, and then you will be offered these options. But it’s not a fact that they will be more comfortable.

2. If you categorically reject all offers, then you will have to wait indefinitely for the DGI to select another option for you. But this may already be a different area and a different type of house.

If two families live in an apartment, should the relocation be given two different apartments or an apartment of a larger area?

The resettlement of residential premises due to demolition does not constitute an improvement in the living conditions of persons living in dilapidated housing stock. According to the current housing legislation, they are required to provide, in place of the demolished one, other comfortable housing, equal in area and number of rooms to the one being resettled. At the same time, the number of families running a separate household in the apartment being resettled has no legal significance.

In general, the leading role on the issue of resettlement from dilapidated housing is given to municipalities. They can provide either two areas or one. It all depends on the specific case. For example, it happens when they give you a one-room apartment for a room without extra payment, and, on the contrary, it happens that you are asked to pay extra for extra square meters.

How is notification of resettlement carried out?

Notices about the relocation of residents, describing the procedure and lists of buildings being demolished, should be published in local newspapers. You can find out more information about resettlement at your local government office. Also, announcements should appear on information boards in entrances.

However, in fact, newspapers may publish uninformative notes about how happy the residents who have already moved are, without any specifics. At the district government, residents will most likely be given general information, redirecting them to the City Property Department (DGI) of a specific district, where they will have to come in person, since it is not always easy to reach them by phone. And announcements on boards in entrances may appear “late,” that is, when “word of mouth” has already had time to work.

In February, it became known that the mayor’s office was ready to demolish all the remaining five-story buildings in the city: about 640 thousand families were awaiting relocation. The last such campaign began in 2011 in several areas of the city and is still ongoing. The Village spoke with those who have experienced relocation from five-story buildings to apartments provided by the city hall over the past five years and share their experiences.

Olga Antonova, 52 years old

translator of literary and political materials

She moved in 2015 from a house on Vernadsky Avenue, 71, to a house on Vernadsky Avenue, 63.

We received the key to the new three-ruble apartment in a 23-story single-entrance tower two years ago. The new apartment needed major repairs, the quality of the developer's work was disgusting: crooked walls, ceilings, floors, warped doors and windows. We started renovations around April; the first brigade, which we foolishly found via the Internet, bombed the entire apartment even more and simply ran away with the money. After some time, we found normal workers, but the repairs progressed extremely slowly, so we continued to live in the Khrushchev.

There we had a three-room apartment with a total area of ​​58 square meters, where my daughter and I were registered. The apartment was periodically well renovated, and the house itself was in a residential condition. Rumors about relocation circulated for several years, but they did not officially say when and where we would be resettled.

When the time came to move, we personally were not offered any options, but were told that all the apartments were already occupied, except for one. Then it turned out that this was an outright lie. Of course, I didn’t hold a candle, but I assume that there was corruption in the distribution of apartments, some even received two.

By mistake, we were almost buried alive - a bulldozer arrived early in the morning and began demolishing the house

While renovations were going on in the new apartment, Zhilischnik workers, accompanied by the police, burst into our old apartment almost every day and demanded that we move out. In August, all communications in the five-story building were cut off, and life became unbearable. By mistake, we were almost buried alive - early in the morning a bulldozer arrived and began demolishing the house. Several apartments in the building remained occupied at that time. We barely had time to stop him; I don’t even want to remember everything about it.

At the moment when everyone had already left the Khrushchev block and, according to the plan, demolition was supposed to begin, only the grandmother remained in the house. For a day of downtime, a fine was imposed on the construction workers or employees of Zhilischnik. The workers carried this grandmother out of the house in their arms along with some of the furniture and simply left her on the pavement.

Residents had different attitudes towards the move. Those who lived with six people in a one-room apartment or two-room apartment, of course, were happy. Those who, like us, had enough living space, did not want to move anywhere. We screamed and wrote, but it didn't help. There were also those who did not survive the move. For example, a woman with whom we were walking our dogs: her sister told me about her death during a chance meeting.

Now I have been living in this monolith for two years. I got the impression that all these supporters of monoliths and resettlement do not understand the words “home” at all. This is the place you will always strive to return to, no matter where you are. People lived all their lives in cozy low houses, covered with greenery on all sides, knew each other not only by sight, but also by name and patronymic, went to each other for every little thing and felt like a single community. They simply physically cannot live in 23-story monoliths built on bare concrete without a single tree.

Vladimir Barkhotkin, 52 years old

engineer

In 2014, I exchanged a two-room apartment at Rechnoy Vokzal for two one-room apartments in a new building on Begovaya Street.

I had a two-room apartment in a five-story building with 41 square meters on the River Station, which I exchanged with an additional payment for two one-room apartments in a house on Begovaya. The area of ​​the new apartments is 51 and 53 square meters. In order to obtain ownership of them, I officially paid the invoice issued to the DGI for additional payment. It was at a very favorable rate, which was half the price of the commercial value of this property. It’s unlikely that I would ever again have the opportunity to buy such apartments in a building from DON-Stroy, almost in the center and a minute’s walk from the metro.

My old apartment was in a nice green area near the metro. But the house itself, of course, was old, with thin walls through which you could clearly hear your neighbors. The kitchen was small - five meters, the corridor was also tiny.

When the demolition of the house was announced, I was called to the DGI for inspection certificates. The department had various facilities scattered throughout the north of Moscow.

It is unlikely that I would ever have the opportunity to buy such apartments again.

I initially had the idea to exchange a two-room apartment for two one-room apartments - of course, with an additional payment. Additional payment is only possible officially; other options are viewed negatively. If you don’t ask the department what else is there and don’t pull information from them, then they only offer two or three options. But I agreed with them that it was in my interests to choose housing quickly, and it was in their interests too. We agreed that from the first inspection card in two days I would give an answer. And due to the fact that it is forbidden to issue more than three inspection tickets per day, I was told the numbers of unoccupied apartments: if I choose them, I can officially receive inspection tickets for them.

I decided to take a realtor with me, and in two days we looked at ten apartments. Options were in towers on Rechny, in panel houses near the railway on Airport and on Dmitrovka in monoliths. The most profitable option from a commercial point of view was found in a 37-story building a few meters from the Begovaya metro station. “Odnushki” in it are up to 70 square meters, and the apartments we looked at in other buildings are a maximum of 40 meters. The deal was concluded quickly, and on December 31, 2014, I received the keys to the apartments on Begovaya.

The downside is that the finish is completely ugly. I saw which apartments on Rechnoye two of my friends were moved to: you could move in and live there right away, the renovations were tolerable. On Begovaya, apparently, the apartments had been closed for several years. Things were really bad with the windows - there was a wild draft through them, the linoleum was rolled up in some places, the wallpaper was a nasty brown color, the bathroom was not connected correctly, the tiles were laid ugly. Everything had to be torn out and redone. I invested a lot of money in repairs. But today the apartments are in excellent condition, nothing has fallen apart. I am definitely pleased with the relocation and improvement of living conditions.

Maria Shchipkova, 32 years old

design engineer, landscape designer

In 2017, by court decision, she moved from the house on Narodnogo Opolcheniya Street, 13 (Khoroshevo-Mnevniki) to a new house on Narodnogo Opolcheniya Street, 3.

We had a “kopeck piece” of 45.8 meters in a five-story building. In April 2016, we received a letter with an offer to look at an apartment in a new building. The apartment with a total area of ​​51 square meters was located in a new building at 3 Narodnogo Opolcheniya Street. The rooms seemed too narrow to us, so we abandoned it.

Then in September a worker knocked on our door trying to hand over some documents. As we later found out in the city property department, the worker brought an exchange agreement for an apartment that we had not even seen. The contract was for an apartment in the same building on Narodnogo Opolcheniya, 3, this time with an area of ​​48.3 square meters. We refused to sign the documents.

The main problem of the apartments in this high-rise building is that the width of the rooms in them does not comply with Moscow city building codes. According to regulations, the width of the bedroom must be at least 2.4 meters. The load-bearing column of our new house extends 17 centimeters into one of the rooms, its length inside the room is 1.3 meters. Thus, the width of the part of the room with the column is 2.27 meters. And this is the width of a double bed, in fact, it is simply inconvenient to use such a bedroom.

In November we were offered another apartment in Mitino with a larger area and a good layout. We agreed to it, even purchased a space for a car in a surface parking lot nearby, and began the process of completing the documents. However, two weeks later we were informed that the house had not yet been transferred to the city from the developer, the documents had not been completed, so they would not give us this apartment and they did not even have the right to show it.

On December 5, we received a summons to appear in court. The DGI issued an order that our family should be moved to that particular house on Narodnogo Opolcheniya, 3, by order of Marat Khusnullin, which we did not see. In general, no documents reached us; they even brought a subpoena backdated.

The court hearing took place on December 26, our five-story building was declared unsafe on the first day of the same month. True, there was no interdepartmental commission, although it was supposed to be held; the decision was made by the housing officer from the council. In our old house, all communications worked normally, only the roof sometimes leaked and some apartments were cool in winter.

The decision was not made in our favor, even though the report from the DGI was drawn up with violations. The Department provided a floor plan from the developer, which did not indicate the width of the portion of the room with the load-bearing column. The court ordered that we be resettled, and if we resist, then this must be done with the participation of bailiffs. At the beginning of February this year, we moved to a new apartment after several visits from bailiffs.

The decoration here is the cheapest, but there is a gas stove, toilet, sinks, and a bathroom. About 30 more people, just like us, were placed in apartments with a load-bearing column in the bedroom by court decision.

As of today, the developer has already begun demolishing our five-story building. Since we were relocated by court decision, we did not hand over the keys and did not sign documents transferring the apartment to the department. The workers simply cut down our front door. Now batteries and water pipes are being cut out of the empty five-story building, gas stoves are being taken out, and even plastic windows are being removed. We are preparing to appeal the court order.

Nadezhda Kaporskaya, 35 years old

psychologist

In 2016, she and her family moved from an apartment in Yuzhny Medvedkovo to a new house, which is located two kilometers from the old one.

We were looking forward to the move and were very happy about it. Two people were registered in the old apartment - it was a two-room apartment with an area of ​​41 square meters in a hellish condition. The electrics were faulty, there was a strong smell in the entrances and there were rats running around, everything was rotten. Since the house was promised to be moved within 15 years, many did not make repairs. We didn’t do either, except maybe cosmetic ones, and then in 1995, it was paid for by the Moscow government.

We were given inspection tickets in March, and we immediately agreed to the first option. We received the contract in April and finally moved out in June. As far as I know, approximately 8-10 months passed from the first viewings to the last ones moving out.

Some sued the city property department because they did not like the proposed options. There were mainly complaints regarding area and floor. True, there were also particularly unsuccessful apartments that the DGI offered to everyone.

But we were lucky: the area had noticeably increased and the floor was comfortable; there was no reason to want better. The new apartment has 60 square meters and two balconies - which is very cool.

There were renovations from the developer, but the materials and quality of work were incredible, incredibly cheap and low quality. Much had to be redone or changed immediately. People dealt with this differently: some moved in as is, while others immediately made a capital investment - it depended on the possibilities. In 2013 she moved from Izmailovo to Northern Izmailovo

Our Khrushchevka in Izmailovo belonged to one of the oldest series, and everything in it was falling apart. They promised to demolish the house within 20 years, so the grandparents who lived there did not make any repairs. We had a two-room apartment with an area of ​​45 square meters.

The demolition was announced in 2013, although for some reason they first made major repairs to the entrance. Khrushchev residents were given six months to choose a new apartment from three offered. The apartment was chosen by my father and grandfather (the two of them were registered in the old house). The first option was in Golyanov, but the parents were not satisfied with the footage and the small balcony. It was assumed that my grandfather would live in the new apartment, but he was sick and could hardly see, so he only walked on the balcony. We told the DGI about grandfather's needs, and the second option was a two-room apartment with an 8-meter loggia, on the 10th floor and a total area of ​​66 square meters. We chose this apartment in Northern Izmailovo. DGI even offered to organize the move for free, but we ordered paid transportation in order to move out faster.

Now I live in this apartment with my husband. Grandfather is already quite ill and therefore lives with my parents, he needs constant care. The apartment is warm, the house is brick-monolithic with thick walls. You couldn’t hear your neighbors, unlike in the five-story building, where you could even hear the vibration on your phone through the cardboard walls.

The apartment is very bright and large, there is even a wardrobe. It would be stupid to rely on luxury doors in an apartment that is given free of charge, as well as to rely on renovations from leading design bureaus. But the decoration was good, in restrained colors, we left it almost completely. Only the bathroom and toilet were combined; the tiles there were laid poorly and began to crumble. They also installed tiles in the kitchen instead of linoleum. A couple of guys from the old house live in my building, and they are also happy with everything. The new neighbors in the stairwell bought an apartment and completely redid everything; on the contrary, it seemed to them that everything was bad.

New houses are built by different companies, so the quality of housing depends on how the developer approaches construction. We were lucky with the developer. I heard stories from friends that they received poor finishing in other houses. Some details also required reworking, of course. But if we take into account that housing was provided for free, then everything is at a decent level.

Now a public garden has been built on the site of our former house, but I haven’t seen it, an acquaintance told me about it. In principle, I am satisfied with the new area. There, of course, it was a little better, closer to the center, more greenery, beautiful Izmailovsky Island. And here is Shchelkovskoye Highway, it’s dirty.

Moscow authorities presented projects of modern buildings that will replace five-story buildings. Each of them will have spacious comfortable halls, entrances with low thresholds and ramps for residents with limited mobility, as well as elevators that go down to the entrance level so that they do not need to be reached by stairs, according to a message published on the Moscow City Hall website.

The website publishes approximate versions of the exteriors of houses and the interiors of apartments in which it is planned to house the residents of the demolished five-story buildings.

The lobby has ceramic tiles, energy-saving lighting, modern mailboxes, intercoms, video cameras, high-speed freight and passenger elevators. The heat will be regulated using energy efficient batteries. Readings from water and electricity meters will be transmitted automatically from individual meters in apartments.

The apartments will have plastic windows installed, each with a glazed balcony or loggia with finishing, as well as facade baskets for installing air conditioners. The apartments will be decorated in light colors. Each is supposed to have a corridor and isolated rooms, doors with handles and locks, and cable ducts in the baseboards. Electrical wiring with safety switches and sockets.

Kitchens will be finished with light-colored wallpaper with the possibility of painting. Residents will receive new electric stoves.

Projects for new houses include separate bathrooms. “Bathrooms are equipped with a chrome heated towel rail and an access point to engineering systems. They will also have a sink with faucet and a metal bathtub with a protective screen and high-quality shower faucets,” the text notes.

At the beginning of 2017, Russian President Vladimir Putin instructed the mayor of Moscow to demolish all the so-called Khrushchev buildings in Moscow and build new houses in their place. Over the next 20 years, it is planned to resettle about 9 thousand houses in Moscow, the total area of ​​which exceeds 25 million square meters. meters. The Russian President noted that if the rights of citizens are violated. Several central districts of the capital.

Last update: 11/23/2017

Demolition of five-story buildings latest news

Where people will be resettled from demolished five-story buildings in Moscow in 2017

Last news:

The portal of the Moscow construction complex has published an album of the finishing of apartments provided to Muscovites under the renovation program. The appearance of the houses indicated in the city hall booklet partially coincides with the already built houses at 3 and 5 Beskudnikovsky Boulevard

Car parking will be built on the site of the demolished five-story buildings.

“After the demolition of five-story buildings, housing prices in Moscow will fall,” Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said in an interview with NTV channel.”

The Supreme Court clarified what kind of housing should be provided upon eviction. When a decision is made to demolish the five-story building, the votes of the “silent” will be distributed in proportion to the votes cast “for” and “against.” The corresponding resolution was signed by Sergei Sobyanin. To date, 67 houses have left the renovation program, 23 of them in the Eastern Administrative District. The public headquarters for monitoring the implementation of the Moscow housing stock renovation program reports that as of June 1, 2017, residents of 67 houses included in the preliminary list were “against” the demolition. Most of all, 23 five-story buildings that voted to leave the program are located in the Eastern District.
Arkhnadzor found more than 300 historic houses on renovation lists.

More details:

The Supreme Court clarified what kind of housing should be provided upon eviction

It's about being considered equivalent previous, the premises must be landscaped in accordance with the conditions of the locality, equivalent in total area to the previous housing, meet the established requirements and be located within the boundaries of the given locality. It is noted that smaller living space and fewer rooms do not make the housing provided unequal.

Premises that meet the specified requirements are provided in the event of demolition of a house, transfer of residential premises to non-residential premises, recognition of it as unfit for habitation, transfer of a religious organization, withdrawal of the land plot where the house is located for government needs, or major repairs of the house.

How to find out about the demolition of a house in Moscow at the address

Notices about the relocation of residents, describing the procedure and lists of buildings being demolished, should be published in local newspapers. You can find out more information about resettlement at your local government office. Also, announcements should appear on information boards in entrances. However, in fact, newspapers may publish uninformative notes about how happy the residents who have already moved are, without any specifics. At the district government, residents will most likely be given general information, redirecting them to the City Property Department (DGI) of a specific district, where they will have to come in person, since it is not always easy to reach them by phone. And announcements on boards in entrances may appear “late,” that is, when “word of mouth” has already had time to work. In general, word of mouth is the best means of notification during relocation. So be friends with your neighbors. However, it all depends on the efficiency of your district DGI.

If two families live in an apartment, should the relocation be given two different apartments or an apartment of a larger area?

Relocation of residential premises due to demolition, is not an improvement in the living conditions of persons living in dilapidated housing stock. According to the current housing legislation, they are required to provide, in place of the demolished one, other comfortable housing, equal in area and number of rooms to the one being resettled. At the same time, the number of families running a separate household in the apartment being resettled has no legal significance. In general, the leading role on the issue of resettlement from dilapidated housing is given to municipalities. They can provide either two areas or one. It all depends on the specific case. For example, it happens when they give you a one-room apartment for a room without extra payment, and, on the contrary, it happens that you are asked to pay extra for extra square meters.

Is it possible to choose an apartment when moving?

At the very beginning, residents are invited to receive an inspection pass, which gives them the right to come to the new building and look at their future home. The inspection ticket already contains the house address and apartment number. With this coupon, you go to the new building, where a representative of the developer (he usually sits on the first floor of one of the entrances of the new building) gives you a key to the apartment (the coupon is taken as a deposit for the duration of the inspection). For inspection, a strict and not very convenient period of time is allocated for working people on weekdays, so get ready to take time off from work. After the inspection, you hand over the key and take the inspection coupon to your DGI. Residents are not allowed to choose an apartment! You can either refuse or sign an agreement for the apartment indicated on the coupon. In the event of a refusal, the DGI usually offers two scenario options: 1. You wait for someone else to refuse housing, and then you will be offered these options. But it’s not a fact that they will be more comfortable. 2. If you categorically reject all offers, then you will have to wait indefinitely for the DGI to select an apartment for you on its own.

When can I register in a new apartment?

It will be possible to register in a new apartment only after receiving all the documents from Rosreestr. Until then, the person remains registered in the old house, even if everyone has already moved out of the house and it has been prepared for demolition.

Do they provide any free moving assistance?

In principle, they can provide you with a car and loaders. But you will have to sign up for a waiting list, which can last for a month. Plus, the type of vehicle may not always allow you to transport large-sized furniture. And the accuracy of the loaders in this case is not guaranteed. In fact, most migrants prefer to use commercial carriers and pay for the move out of their own pockets.

Where will the five-story buildings be relocated?

The bill states that owners of apartments in demolished buildings and those who live there on social rent will be provided with equivalent housing - that is, one in which the number of rooms is the same, and the living area of ​​the apartment is comparable. In any case, they will not give you an apartment with an area smaller than the previous one. The bill states that we are talking about comfortable residential premises, that is, about houses that have already been put into operation. It also stipulates that new housing must be located in the same area as the house being demolished, but there are a number of exceptions. So, Residents of the Central District, Zelenograd and new Moscow can be resettled to another area- it is planned to provide them with housing within districts accommodation. In addition, they can be relocated to another area with the written consent of the residents.

Where will they be relocated from the five-story buildings of ZAO Moscow?

Mozhaisky district Mozhaisky, apt. 78-80, st. Krasnykh Zori, bldg. 12
Assigned address: st. Krasnykh Zori, 59B
Mozhaisky Mozhaisky district, st. Gzhatskaya, vl. 16
Assigned address: st. Gzhatskaya, 16, bldg. 1
Ochakovo-Matveevskoe district Ochakovo-Matveevskoe, Aminevskoe highway (between Aminevskoe highway and Nezhinskaya street)
Vernadskogo Avenue, Vernadskogo Avenue, apt. 32, 33, bldg. 12
Assigned address: Vernadsky Avenue, 61, bldg. 3
Vernadskogo Avenue, Vernadskogo Avenue, apt. 32, 33, bldg. 12A
Assigned address: Vernadsky Avenue, 69
Vernadskogo Avenue, Vernadskogo Avenue, apt. 32, 33, bldg. 35
Vernadskogo Avenue, Vernadskogo Avenue, apt. 32-33, bldg. 54
Vernadskogo Avenue, Vernadskogo Avenue, apt. 32, 33, bldg. 77-1
Vernadskogo Avenue, Vernadskogo Avenue, apt. 34, 35, bldg. 24
Vernadskogo Avenue, Vernadskogo Avenue, apt. 34, 35, bldg. 26
Vernadskogo Avenue, Vernadskogo Avenue, apt. 34, 35, bldg. 27
Fili-Davydkovo district Fili-Davydkovo, apt. 65, bldg. 3
Fili-Davydkovo district Fili-Davydkovo, apt. 71, bldg. 18

Where will they be resettled from five-story buildings in the Eastern Administrative District of Moscow?

Bogorodskoye, Millionnaya st., vl. 3
Bogorodskoye, microdistrict 8b, bldg. 4
Bogorodskoye, TPU "Open Highway"
Vostochnoye Izmailovo, 13th Parkovaya St., ow. 16
East Izmailovo, 15th Parkovaya St., ow. 27
East Izmailovo, 16th Parkovaya St., ow. 12
Golyanovo, Shchelkovskoe highway, 71, bldg. 1, etc. 73
Ivanovskoye, microdistrict 40-52, bldg. 2
Ivanovskoye, microdistrict 40-52, bldg. 5
Izmailovo, Izmailovsky proezd, vl. 5
Kosino-Ukhtomsky district, st. Black Lake, ow. 2-8
Kosino-Ukhtomsky district, Orenburgskaya st., 3
Kosino-Ukhtomsky district, Kaskadnaya st., vl. 21, school. 1
Kosino-Ukhtomsky district, Kaskadnaya st., vl. 21, school. 2
Metrogorodok, Otkrytoe shosse, ow. thirty
Metrogorodok, Otkrytoe shosse, ow. 26
Perovo, st. Plekhanov, vl. 18

Perovo, st. Plekhanov, vl. 22
Perovo, 2nd Vladimirskaya st., ow. thirty
Perovo, Zeleny Prospekt, ow. 27-29
Severnoye Izmailovo, microdistrict 80, bldg. 7
Severnoye Izmailovo, microdistrict 80, bldg. 9
Northern Izmailovo, st. Konstantina Fedina, owner 13-19

Where will they be relocated from five-story buildings in the South-East Administrative District of Moscow?

Vykhino-Zhulebino, microdistrict 129, Fergana st., ow. 5
Kuzminki, apt. 115, bldg. 17
Kuzminki, apt. 115, bldg. 18
Kuzminki, apt. 116, bldg. 1 (Shumilova St., 4)

Kuzminki, apt. 116, bldg. 2 (Shumilova St., 16, building 2)

Kuzminki, microdistrict 113, st. Young Lenintsev, ow. 42
Kuzminki, microdistrict 119, Volgogradsky prospect, ow. 163
Kuzminki, microdistrict 120, st. Zhigulevskaya, vl. 3
Kuzminki, microdistrict 120, st. Zelenodolskaya, vl. 28, bldg. 4
Kuzminki, microdistrict 118, st. Young Lenintsev, ow. 117
Kuzminki, microdistrict 117, st. Young Lenintsev, ow. 73
Kuzminki, microdistrict 118, st. Young Lenintsev, ow. 99
Lefortovo, apt. 3, bldg. 6
Lefortovo, Shepelyuginskaya st., vl. 16
Lyublino, microdistrict A, Lyublinskaya st., 113
Lyublino, microdistrict Zh, Krasnodonskaya st., 46
Lyublino, microdistrict A, Lyublinskaya st., 109, bldg. 1
Lyublino, microdistrict A, Lyublinskaya st., vl. 111, bldg. 2
Lyublino, microdistrict Zh, st. Upper fields, 19, bldg. 2
Nizhny Novgorod district, apt. 80, between Novokhokhlovskaya st. and the Third Transport Ring
Ryazan district, microdistrict 128a, st. Papernika, 2
Tekstilshchiki, st. Chistova, ow. 3a, p. 1
Yuzhnoportovy district, microdistrict D, st. Petra Romanova, 18

Where will they be relocated from five-story buildings in the Southern Administrative District of Moscow?

Biryulyovo Vostochnoye, Zagorye microdistrict, opposite the owner. 2
Biryulyovo Zapadnoe, Bulatnikovsky proezd, 16a
Biryulyovo Zapadnoye, Kharkovsky proezd, near vl. 1
Danilovsky district, at the intersection of 5th Roshchinsky passage and 2nd Roshchinskaya street.
Danilovsky district, Projected passage 4062, no. 8
Donskoy district, Sevastopolsky prospect, opposite 7, bldg. 6
Nagatinsky Zaton, st. Rechnikov, 18-20
Nagatino-Sadovniki, Varshavskoe highway, opposite 47, bldg. 2
Nagatino-Sadovniki, Varshavskoe highway, opposite 61a
Nagorny district, Simferopolsky proezd, vl. 7
Tsaritsyno, Yerevanskaya st., opposite 10, bldg. 1
Tsaritsyno, Kavkazsky Boulevard, vl. 40-42
Tsaritsyno, Kantemirovskaya st., opposite no. 27
Tsaritsyno, Kantemirovskaya st., vl. 37-41

Tsaritsyno, Kaspiyskaya st., 28, bldg. 4
Tsaritsyno, Sevanskaya st., vl. 54-56
Tsaritsyno, st. Bekhtereva, vl. 3, z/u1 (Tsaritsyno, microdistrict 4, building 402)
Chertanovo Yuzhnoye, microdistrict 26, bldg. 81-82

Where will they be relocated from five-story buildings in Central Administrative District Moscow?

Basmanny district, Bakuninskaya st., vl. 60
Basmanny district, lane. Poslannikov, ow. 18 - Starokirochny lane, ow. 5

Krasnoselsky district, apt. 998, 2/1, pp. 1, 2
Krasnoselsky district, apt. 998, Rusakovskaya st., 6

Tagansky district, st. Melnikova, 2

Where will they be relocated from five-story buildings in the Northern Administrative District of Moscow?

Beskudnikovsky district, apt. 8, 9, bldg. 1
Beskudnikovsky district, apt. 8, 9, bldg. 20
Voykovsky district, Narvskaya st., vl. 5
Golovinsky district, Avangardnaya st., vl. 10
Golovinsky district, Flotskaya st., vl. 68, bldg. 1
Golovinsky district, Flotskaya st., vl. 68, bldg. 2
Golovinsky district, Onezhskaya st., vl. 35, bldg. 5
Golovinsky district, Onezhskaya st., vl. 35, bldg. 6
Golovinsky district, Kronstadt Boulevard, ow. 55
Golovinsky district, Smolnaya st., vl. 21
Western Degunino, Angarskaya st., 33
Western Degunino, Bazovskaya st., vl. 15
Western Degunino, Taldomskaya st., ow. 1

Koptevo, 3rd Novomikhailovsky proezd, ow. 8, bldg. 1
Timiryazevsky district, Astradamskaya st., vl. 9a
Timiryazevsky district, Dmitrovskoe highway, ow. 55

Where will they be resettled from five-story buildings in North-East Administrative District Moscow?

Alekseevsky district, Staroalekseevskaya st., ow. 3

Butyrsky district, microdistrict 78, bldg. 66
Butyrsky district, st. Rustaveli, vl. 3, bldg. 4
Losinoostrovsky district, Izumrudnaya st., ow. 26a

Losinoostrovsky district, microdistrict 3, bldg. 53
Losinoostrovsky district, Taininskaya st., vl. 13

Marfino, Gostinichny proezd, vl. 8, bldg. 2
Maryina Roshcha, Oktyabrskaya st., ow. 105

Maryina Roshcha, Sheremetyevskaya st., ow. 5, bldg. 1
Maryina Roshcha, Sheremetyevskaya st., ow. 13, bldg. 1
Maryina Roshcha, TPU "Maryina Roshcha"
Rostokino, Selskokhozyaystvennaya st., ow. 14

Sviblovo, Nansen passage, vl. 8
Yuzhnoye Medvedkovo, st. Molodtsova, 33, bldg. 1
Yuzhnoye Medvedkovo, Dezhneva proezd, 12, bldg. 1

Where will they be resettled from five-story buildings in North-Western Administrative District Moscow?

Mitino, Novobratsevo district, Parkovaya st., ow. 31 (opposite)
Northern Tushino, apt. 5, Turistskaya st., vl. 14, bldg. 12
Northern Tushino, st. Vilisa Latsisa, ow. 42
Khoroshevo-Mnevniki, apt. 83, Generala Glagolev st., ow. 5, bldg. 1
Khoroshevo-Mnevniki, st. Demyan Bedny, ow. 22
Khoroshevo-Mnevniki, Karamyshevskaya embankment, ow. 22, bldg. 2
Khoroshevo-Mnevniki, st. Mnevniki, ow. 10, bldg. 1
Shchukino, microdistrict 12, Novoshukinskaya st., ow. 8

Is it possible to refuse to demolish a house?

The bill in its current form virtually eliminates the possibility of protesting the demolition of a house. According to it, residents will be notified that their house is in a renovation zone and will be demolished, after which, within 60 days, the resident must sign an agreement under which he will be provided with other housing. If the agreement is not signed within the specified period, the authorities have the right to go to court to force it to be signed. In this case, it does not matter whether the apartment is owned or socially leased, or whether the plot under the house is registered as the property of the residents, since, according to the bill, after a decision is made to include the house in the renovation zone, the plot under it becomes the property of the city.

Will the opinions of residents be taken into account when creating demolition lists?

There is no clear answer to this question in the bill. On the one hand, it says that the authorities must develop a mechanism for identifying the opinions of Muscovites, but how this will be done and whether the identified opinions can influence anything is not said. In addition, the bill allows not to hold public hearings when making a decision on both the demolition of houses and the further development of liberated territories. It also allows you to ignore the type of permitted use of sites and height regulations - changes to the rules of land use and development are proposed to be made directly, without public hearings. The decision to include the house in the renovation program can also be challenged in court, but this will not prevent the authorities from sending a proposal for relocation, for signing of which the same 60 days will be given. It is also worth noting that the bill gives the right to establish a public easement on any land, including privately owned ones, for laying communications to objects under construction.

What will happen to contributions for major repairs?

Contributions for major repairs paid by residents of demolished houses are proposed to be used for the construction of new housing. As soon as the decision to demolish the house is made, contributions can stop being paid.

Will the owners of non-residential premises in demolished buildings receive any compensation?

Yes, such owners will be provided with premises of similar size. However, the bill does not guarantee that this will be done within the same district or at least the district - we are talking only about the area.

Natalya Zlobina, journalist

I decided to write about some aspects of relocation from five-story buildings that I have been observing for several years. Maybe this will be useful for those who are now faced with the choice of whether to move. I live in a house near the Belyaevo metro station, built for displaced people from five-story buildings on Odesskaya Street back in 2003. As usual, a third of the apartments in it were intended for resettlers, two thirds were for sale. We bought an apartment in this house. Then the settlers were treated in every possible way, and they were the first to be lucky. Almost all of them won in area. Our house is a good one, KOPE series, with spacious apartments and kitchens of 11 meters. 2 entrances, 22 floors.

The resettlers were allocated all the apartments from the first to the third floor in the entrance with the best apartment layout, and from the first to the sixth in the one with the worst layout. And the so-called linear two-room apartments on all floors in both entrances. All kitchens in our house are 10-11 meters long, and there are very large bathrooms. The apartments were handed over to the displaced people with finishing, and to those who bought them - without, bare concrete. Our five-story residents moved into the house on the eve of the New Year, when the house had not yet been handed over to the commission. They were probably very persecuted. Overall, their renovation was not bad, my neighbors still live with it. Among the shortcomings are steel rattling bathtubs, laminate flooring that rattles so much that you can hear a cat walking. (We have a problem with audibility between floors. Almost no one has done soundproofing, so you can hear where the neighbors’ buttons are rolling from above. And how the toilet is babbling. We once chose a cork floor, which saves our neighbors below, but we probably exception).

For six months, until May, our settlers lived alone in the house. It was difficult and scary - the house was half empty, the elevators were not working well, and the water was turned off every now and then. Homeless people spent the night in the house - it was winter, the house was heated and the entrances were not closed. (We dealt with the last homeless people a year and a half after moving in, when everything was renovated and the entrances were closed). In May, the house was finally handed over to the commission, and the keys were distributed to those who bought the apartments. And then hell began for the settlers. For a year or more, repairs and decoration were underway in all other apartments in the building. I can't imagine how they pulled it off. Heaps of building materials, permanent workers, elevators broken due to the transportation of heavy loads. Let me remind you - basically, there was only one apartment on the floor out of four for resettlement. In general, it took them at least a year and a half to lead a relatively normal life after moving. Now our house is witnessing the second five-story epic - three five-story buildings are being demolished directly in our yard, the last ones according to the Luzhkov program. There is something to compare with. KOPE is no longer being built for displaced people, it’s too fat.

SU-155 builds houses of the I-155MM series. Kitchens are no longer 10-11, but 8 meters. And there are a lot of features that are very annoying for our immigrants. I follow their forum on snosinfo.ru. So, one of the advantages is definitely that they are moving to a house that is located 300-400 meters from the ones being demolished. But further from the metro these same meters. Why are they unhappy? Layouts. In the demolished houses there are many two-room apartments with a living area of ​​36 meters - two large rooms. They get a maximum living space of 33 meters, and some get 29. One of the rooms is ten meters long. For a family with a child, maybe nothing, but for two adults it’s bad. There is immediately a conflict - who will live in the ten-meter apartment - an adult daughter or an elderly mother, for example? They are dissatisfied with the way they give examinations. Over and over again they offer the same layout option, but on different floors and in different entrances. Although I'm not happy with the layout.

The house was delivered with many construction and planning problems. But it is impossible to fight this. Those who do not sign the acceptance certificate do not receive the keys, and no one corrects the defects. People continue to live in dilapidated five-story buildings and only reduce the amount of time they could spend on repairs. So they finally give up, sign everything, move and begin the renovations themselves. There are some problems that are relatively easy to fix - such as torn wallpaper on the walls and ceiling and peeled doors (film on chipboard). Like the extra holes from the bathroom to the toilet that workers made while laying plastic water supply and sewerage pipes back and forth. There are tightly sealed ventilation holes. The worst thing is with heating. The house does not have the usual heating risers in each room. There is one riser per floor, located in the inter-apartment hall, from where plastic pipes along the floor, in a screed, go to the radiators in each room. Connection to the battery with plastic nuts, which are torn off everywhere due to pressure (the house is 19 floors). All this can be replaced wisely only by removing the floor and screed, since the nuts are welded on and can only be cut off. Then you have to build up the pipes. They are afraid that not everyone will be able to carry out this operation, and the lower apartments will constantly be flooded.

I don't like how the eviction itself is organized. Constant pressure. The gas was cut off very early. Central Asian workers from Zhilishchnik immediately move into the apartments that move out. Apartments that move out are immediately destroyed. In March, we observed how in a building that had not yet been evicted, the windows in all the evicted apartments were broken. But the house was heated, and there were still people living in it. In general, few can resist in such conditions. In general, think. These people are still being resettled under the old law.

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