There are no structural reasons for tearing down these
buildings, since the concrete they are made of in fact hardens with time for
many years. Some say such buildings are at their strongest after about 50
years. Nevertheless, such buildings seem not to be very appreciated by
Lithuanians, so many of them will live dangerously in the years to come.
It looks terrible, and I suspect it is also not from the
soviet era, but the structure is strong. And it is not finished. Who knows what
an architect could have made of it. An older one, that is.
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As long as people nowadays have the sense to replace older
buildings with new ones that are both functional and esthetical, it is not
really a tragedy. Even if the building could have stood for a couple of hundred
years more. Replacing the old with something new does however not always work
out well, as this example shows.
No, the picture is not photo shopped. There is actually such
a building, and it is a monument to either corruption or to the need for
building regulations.
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There were after all quite a lot of buildings and monuments
erected in Lithuania during the soviet era, and many of them were quite unique for
that particular time. Even though they might look outdated at present, I still
think it would be a wise choice to keep them. After all, how decorative is
present day architecture? Not to mention, how original is it? Commercial
buildings and even many official buildings increasingly look the same all over
Europe.
Some kind of yacht club buildings in Trakai. In my mind,
just as important to protect as the Trakai castle itself. After all, that place
was also a dump until it was refurbished.
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