Category
page 1Architecture in the Soviet Union
White Sea – Baltic Canal
canal in Russia

Khrushchyovka
thumb|Panel khrushchevka in Tomsk
Stalinist architecture
architectural style
Mother Ukraine Monument
monument in Ukraine
House of Soviets
former building in Kaliningrad, Russia

microdistrict
thumb|One of the typical Tbilisi, Georgia microdistricts
thumb|View of Namyv microdistrict in Mykolaiv, [[Ukraine]]
thumb|right|Aerial view of Väike-Õismäe, [[Tallinn, Estonia]]
thumb|Chertanovo Severnoye District, [[Moscow, Russia]]
thumb|Bragino microdistrict in Yaroslavl, Russia
thumb|Újpalota, [[Budapest, Hungary]]
A microdistrict or microraion is a residential complex—a primary structural element of the residential area construction in the Soviet Union and in some post-Soviet and former socialist states. Residential districts in most of the cities and towns in Russia and the republics of
constructivist architecture
1920s–30s architecture movement in the USSR combining advanced technology and engineering with Communist social purpose

Central Academic Theatre of the Russian Army
theatre in Moscow, Russia

OSA Group
organization

factory-kitchen
thumb|220px|Kitchen-factory No. 1, Moscow (1931)
A factory-kitchen or kitchen factory () was a large mechanized enterprise of food service in the Soviet Union, originated in the 1920–1930s. Its main purpose was centralized preparation of food (both prefabrication and full processing) supplied for communal dining rooms or for personal purchase. Factory-kitchens were characteristic of their unique architecture. Sometimes the term is inadequately translated as communal kitchen, the latter being a kitchen in a Soviet communal apartment.
People's Architect of the USSR
Soviet title of honor (1967–1990)
Dubulti
railway station in Jūrmala, Latvia
Stalinka
thumb|Stalin's Empire style in [[Nikopol, Ukraine]]
Stalinka, Stalinist apartment buildings or Stalin-era buildings, are a common colloquial term for apartment buildings constructed in the USSR from 1933 to 1961, primarily during the rule of Joseph Stalin. They were predominantly built in the neoclassical style (Stalinist Classical). Stalinkas are solidly constructed multi-apartment buildings with full utilities, featuring non-combustible materials and typically at least two stories high.
The term Stalinka does not include other types of residential buildings from Stalin's era, such as barrack
Eighth Sister
planned high-rise building in Moscow
Irina Benua
Russian restorer (1912–2004)