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Residential property at Khalurin street wrecked and razed to the ground

Eleven families have been relocated under the Republican relocation plan

House at Khalurin street leveled, reduced to rubble
House at Khalurin street leveled, reduced to rubble

Residential property at Khalurin street wrecked and razed to the ground

In the Siberian city of Yakutsk, a significant initiative is underway to improve living conditions for its residents. The program, which was initiated by President Vladimir Putin in 2008, aims to resettle citizens living in dilapidated housing.

The program has been ongoing in Russia, and in Yakutsk, it is being overseen by the national project "Infrastructure for Life" since 2025. The mayor of Yakutsk, Yevgeny Grigoryev, is overseeing the project, with Nikolay Poluyanov responsible for implementing the relocation program for residents from dilapidated houses in Yakutia in 2025.

The city is allocating 84 million rubles for this project in its current budget, part of which will be used for the demolition of 30 evacuated dilapidated buildings this year. One such building, a two-story apartment building at 5/1 Halaturina Street, was demolished on September 5, 2020. This demolition is part of a larger project to remove dilapidated buildings in Yakutsk.

The building at 5/1 Halaturina Street is one of the 30 buildings scheduled for demolition this year. The program involves resettling families living in dilapidated buildings, and since the start of 2025, 3,150 citizens have been resettled from 17,390 square meters of dilapidated housing in the region. In total, the program aims to resettle another 5,080 citizens from 99,180 square meters of dilapidated housing by the end of 2025.

The program's goals are to resettle citizens from dilapidated housing in the region, providing them with safer and more comfortable living conditions. Eleven families were resettled under the republican program since its inception. The demolition was announced by Yevgeny Grigoryev, the city's mayor, and the building was declared dilapidated in 2015.

The project in Yakutsk is part of a broader national effort to improve living conditions for citizens across Russia. The program for resettling citizens from dilapidated housing has been ongoing since 2008, and it continues to make a positive impact on the lives of many.

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