Wooden skyscraper.

I stumbled on the Internet on a photo of this structure.
And just could not share with you the fact that as a result of him found.
(7 pictures and a few beeches)

Unusual 13 storey wooden structure, 38 meters in height, it was possible to observe a half years ago in the region of Arkhangelsk in Solombala.





The author and the superintendent is a man Nikolai Sutyagin. He built a skyscraper primarily for economic reasons from the tree. Although the project as such was not, and he is not an architect by education (a simple peasant village, but with a twinkle in business glah), building lasted for several decades. The main reason for such a protracted construction - at the height of its construction "lucky" Sutyagin coming a long time in places not so remote.



The very same project is very similar to the residential complex "Vertical" (who still remember the first name now miraksovsogo "Valley House." Simply put, the first idea was - to build a standard house, well, maybe a little higher than in neighboring countries, but with the construction, the appetite We are growing, and with them the floor.



Sutyagin House was recognized as a sensation at the conference "The wooden building in the northern cities" held in the Norwegian city of Trondheim, it had planned to enter the Guinness World Records as the tallest wooden building in the world.



In July 2008, the court ruled that the building is built illegally, as in Arkhangelsk prohibited to build private wooden buildings over two stories without prior approval from the authorities, and should be demolished at the expense of the owner. On the court decision Sutyagin appealed. According to the press secretary of the Federal Bailiff Service of the Arkhangelsk region Natalia Kitaeva, the house should be demolished no later than 1 February 2009.



22 December 2008, workers began disassembling the structure. December 23, 2008 in News NTV was shown video of the beginning of the demolition of the house. December 26, 2008 the tower was demolished upper house Sutyagin. By early February 2009, the building was completely destroyed.



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