Cabin Fever
As Muscovites get rich on oil, dachas, the rustic country houses that nourish the Russian soul, get gaudy
- By Craig Mellow
- Photographs by Jeremy Nicholl
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2005, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
All the same, only at their peril do the dacha elite forget that they take their ease atop a volcano known as Russia in its still-wrenching transition out of communism. Beyond the lights of Moscow, many families do live on the official per capita income of $200 a month and are inclined to see even a mini-fortune of $200,000 as having been stolen from their common socialist pot during the rigged bidding of early capitalism. No one on the Rublyevka expects that rage to erupt in a new 1917. But almost everyone knows it is out there.
“People stick to the Rublyevka and other luxury districts not only for prestige but for safety,” says Gary Onanov. “You could buy all the land you want [60 miles] from Moscow. But then when you go to work one day, the neighbors will come and burn your lovely dacha down.”
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Comments (1)
"Gaudy"? I sorry but the dacha in the photograph is beautiful.
Remarks like that explain why so much of American architecture is bland and funny looking. Over imaginative and under creative.
Russia is one of the few countries that can create real beauty at will.
Posted by JBoy on October 2,2009 | 02:47 AM