Tall & Urban News

More High-Rise Residential Developments Emerging in Moscow

Jigh-rise residential buildings are becoming an increasing feature of the city’s skyline.
Jigh-rise residential buildings are becoming an increasing feature of the city’s skyline.
18 February 2021 | Moscow, Russia

Housing developers in the Russian capital allegedly built more high-rise residential complexes in 2020 than previously, an industry report published 17 February has shown, highlighting the boom in Moscow’s construction industry despite the coronavirus pandemic.

More than 860,000 square meters of living space in skyscrapers—equivalent to 17,200 average sized apartments—was built in Moscow in 2020, according to analysts at Capital Group, one of Russia’s largest development companies. It defines residential skyscrapers as buildings with at least 33 floors, which typically stand over 100 meters tall. 

Moscow’s construction industry is a rare bright spot amid the pandemic as a combination of record low interest rates, a state-supported cheap mortgage program and exemptions for the construction industry from forced lockdowns during the first wave of the coronavirus have helped support a house building boom. 

Residential construction was 24 percent higher in Moscow and the surrounding area during the final quarter of 2020 compared with the same period the previous year.

High-rise buildings have accelerated even faster, said Capital Group. The record 2020 numbers were 60 percent higher than the previous annual high, set in 2018 and the living space completed last year was 30-times higher than in 2013—a benchmark year for the Russian economy before the 2014-16 economic crisis and the imposition of western sanctions—which is widely used to track Russia’s economic performance. 

The developers also pointed to increasing “Americanization” of Moscow’s living space. 

“Residential buildings with 30 or more floors are becoming part of everyday urban development,” analysts said in a report. “Moscow is becoming more American, with more complexes not just of 100 meters tall, but 150 meters, and with unique architectural designs.”

The Kremlin has proposed extending a popular cheap mortgage scheme, rolled out at the height of the coronavirus pandemic last year, until 2024 to support the Russian economy. However, Russia’s Central Bank has warned cheap mortgages—at their lowest level in Russian history—could lead to riskier borrowing practices and may push back against an extension.

For more on this story, go to The Moscow Times.