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Did you know that homes of the future were conceived by poet Velimir Khlebnikov?

Kira Lisitskaya (Photo: D. German/Sputnik; Sputnik)
"A thousand glass dwellings, connected by a suspended carriage with towers, glistening with glass. Artists lived there, enjoying double views of the sea, as the needle-shaped tower jutted out toward the sea."

"<…> Nearby, a flower-shaped house soared to an unattainable height, with a reddish-frosted glass dome, a lace-like fence on the cupola and slender iron staircase legs. <…> Two hair-like houses curled up next to one another. <…> A grove of glass poplars guarded the sea."

This is how futurist poet Velimir Khlebnikov described the houses of the future in his essay ‘Us & Houses’. He also conceived of a new type of apartment – the ‘glass-hut’: in this compact dwelling made of curved glass, one could rest and even travel. They weren't tied to a specific building and could be moved in any direction – it was enough to attach one to a train platform or a steamship. Khlebnikov also proposed combining them into residential complexes or hotels by mounting the glass-huts onto the building's framework. Khlebnikov's futuristic city looked like a multitude of multifunctional structures: it had ‘ulochertog’ (a street with a representative building), ‘mostouls’ (bridge-like houses) and ‘izbouls’ (streets lined with houses containing residential units).

Victor Sadchikov, Valery Khristophorov / TASS

All these architectural projects seemed like something out of science fiction at the time. But Khlebnikov turned out to be something of a visionary. In 1928, a young Soviet architect named Georgy Krutikov developed a design for flying houses. Half a century later, four high-rises would be built on Moscow's Novy Arbat, whose silhouettes resemble open books.