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Yes, but Kwolong was a catastrophe in terms of living conditions, while danchi's are still being built today and millions of Japanese families live in such accommodations. I lived in different types in the North (Hokkaido) and in the South (Kyushu, Fukuoka), there are differences depending on the region's climate, but in general, the concept is the same.
After the war, Japan bought a lot of unused projects from the USSR, and that is how modern community housing in Japan started. If you compare them, you can see a lot of similarities between danchi and housing from the USSR era in Russia and different post-USSR countries. Especially on Hokkaido, these are looking a lot like Soviet buildings from the 50s and 60s. 1 reply
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