We count all rooms except kitchen, toilet and bathroom, livingroom included. "Clean and renovated" flat in Moscow with two bedrooms and a livingroom would cost you about $2 000 - $3 000 to rent a month and about $ 700 000 to buy. But this kind of flat is considered a luxury. The same flat in typical "commieblock" neighbourhood would cost slightly less: about $ 1 700 -$2 000 to rent and about $ 500 000 to buy. The same flat in the town where I live (50 km east from Moscow) will cost about $700-$1000 a month to rent and about $200 000 - $250 000 to buy. Note that the average monthly salary in Moscow is about $1000-$1500 a month (in my town it's $500-$800 a month), so most people just can't afford to rent a flat. "Working class" people live in flats wich they inherited from their parents/grandparents or have to rent just a room. At the same time most "blue collar" jobs in Moscow occupied by Middle Asia immigrants who usually live in sewers, attics, garbage cans or rent a 1-room flat for 20-30 people.
Moscow buidings you could classify by following categories:
1) Old houses (pre-revolutionary era) - extremly expensive but at the same time often in bad condition, if not recently renovated (wooden beams in overlaps and such things), most of them are not used for living anymore but remade into offices and other public places.
2) Stalin era buildings - very expensive and usually good (high celing, big rooms, houses are elegant and located in prestigious neigbourhood). These houses were built for Soviet elite of that times.
3) Khrushchev era buildings - most ugly ones, with very small flats, usually has 5-floors and without an elevator. Could be pretty expensive if located in "prestigious" neghbourhood (near metro station or so). There is an urban legend that Soviet builders have "borrowed" the design for these from Nazi Germany architects who designed it as a barracks for their future "slavische untermenschen" slaves. The bitter irony is that the people who defeated Nazis often lived in worse living conditions at that time.
4) 1970-1980 era buldings - slightly upgraded versions of "krushchevkas", has more floors, an elevator, rooms, kitchen and facilities are bigger, every flat has a balcony. I live in such a flat.
5) Modern "economy class" buildings - ok flats, but often are built with a very bad quality.
6) Modern "luxury class" buildings - pompous and very expensive, quality of building can be bad too (leaking pipes, сracking walls, etc.)
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