This would be Dracula’s apartment if he lived in Russia: a photo of a real kopeck piece

The interior of this dwelling looks very frightening: red color, gloomy carvings, strange accessories are spilled everywhere. The designer’s taste seems to be quite specific.

An unusual apartment was noticed in the public “Suffering middle ages“: “Attention! Here Count Dracula is selling his Tula residence. ” “A good lock, we must take it,” they reacted in the comments.

A standard kopeck piece in a standard panel five-story building is really impressive: a golden ceiling, ordinary polished furniture adorned with bas-reliefs similar to medieval ones, frightening masks hang everywhere, a shield and a sword hang over the sofa in the living room. There are a lot of details, and all very strange – as if the owner of the apartment was really trying to recreate the castle of a medieval knight. But it turned out what happened.

A golden ceiling, under which a chandelier with glass pendants flaunts, by the window there is something that looks like a fireplace – with monograms and even a lion’s face, a book-table and a clearly very inexpensive sofa are right there. What brings it all together is a red carpet laid on top of another carpet – or carpet, which is also weird. Only the balcony door stands out from the general scarlet drama. Typical white plastic does not fit into the concept of the Middle Ages.

Heavy carving is adjacent to standard Soviet furniture, the carpet lies even on the balcony, and in the smaller room the carpets are laid in three layers altogether. There are two refrigerators in the apartment – one in the kitchen and the other in the hallway. Both are lavishly decorated with apparently homemade stucco. There are crosses on the kitchen cabinets, the sinks are decorated with something stylized as cobblestones.

Contrasted with this splendor is the countertop, darkened by spilled tea, and linoleum “like parquet”. There is no dining table – and why is it.

Separate compliments were awarded to the toilet – they say, the “throne” is modest for the count. And what is behind the “throne” in the wall? A door to the underworld?

The realtor, however, describes the apartment in a very mundane way: a house built in 1973, rooms in a “trailer”, a separate bathroom, a kitchen – 6 squares. “The apartment is in a residential condition,” – just in case, the announcement informs. By the way, this miracle costs 2 million 650 thousand rubles.

Someone even suggested that this is actually the Tula residence of not Dracula, but Nikita Dzhigurda. Decent version! And what do you think?

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