These buildings can and should be restored… what the hell… how is it possible to be this… baradi
mrvl on
IMO the Cascade situation is even worse.
Karineh on
Well… when diaspora money flows into Armenia, who is actually holding those funds accountable I wonder 💭
pride_of_artaxias on
Give them to TUMO. The only institution in Armenia that knows how to handle old dilapidated buildings with due respect and care.
Alternatively, demolishe these and build pharmacies in their place.
Hot_Supermarket_9970 on
What was/were those building(s) originally?
Cheap-Engine259 on
Just in front of a luxury hotel. So armenian
Zealousideal_Map_447 on
The whole center of Yerevan is unacceptable
ummmyeahi on
Developing countries all around the world have buildings like this in the center of their main cities and tourist locations. Yea it’s an eyesore and should be restored, but money doesn’t flow to dilapidated buildings when you’re at a constant threat of war, you have other higher priorities like the health and economic well being of your population, their safety, basic necessities like water, power, etc.
It takes a private person/business to buy that property and invest in its restoration. When it makes financial sense, it will get restored, or a new building will take its place.
Green7s on
If you go in or look from the side, many of these are not safe and falling apart. They’re not safe to be renovated, they need to be demolished. I was told the fees and taxes to destroy buildings is so high that they let all these buildings rot. That’s why there’s so many.
Pristine_Ice5914 on
This is near koghbatsi yeah? I live in Yerevan currently and believe the issue is that most of these are privately owned and there’s owner disputes and what-not going on.
11 Comments
These buildings can and should be restored… what the hell… how is it possible to be this… baradi
IMO the Cascade situation is even worse.
Well… when diaspora money flows into Armenia, who is actually holding those funds accountable I wonder 💭
Give them to TUMO. The only institution in Armenia that knows how to handle old dilapidated buildings with due respect and care.
Alternatively, demolishe these and build pharmacies in their place.
What was/were those building(s) originally?
Just in front of a luxury hotel. So armenian
The whole center of Yerevan is unacceptable
Developing countries all around the world have buildings like this in the center of their main cities and tourist locations. Yea it’s an eyesore and should be restored, but money doesn’t flow to dilapidated buildings when you’re at a constant threat of war, you have other higher priorities like the health and economic well being of your population, their safety, basic necessities like water, power, etc.
It takes a private person/business to buy that property and invest in its restoration. When it makes financial sense, it will get restored, or a new building will take its place.
If you go in or look from the side, many of these are not safe and falling apart. They’re not safe to be renovated, they need to be demolished. I was told the fees and taxes to destroy buildings is so high that they let all these buildings rot. That’s why there’s so many.
This is near koghbatsi yeah? I live in Yerevan currently and believe the issue is that most of these are privately owned and there’s owner disputes and what-not going on.
Similar situation to cascade btw
Yall don’t understand… this is eco brutalism