Vitaly Pavlovich Lagutenko[1] (Виталий Павлович Лагутенко, 1904, Mogilev – 1967, Moscow) was a Soviet architect and engineer. His studies of low-cost prefabricated concrete construction, supported by Nikita Khrushchev, lead to a complete switch of Soviet building practice from masonry to prefab concrete. Lagutenko designed the standardized 5-story apartment houses, known as khrushchyovka, and associated technologies of fast, mass-scale construction. These low-cost blocks, built by millions of units, helped relieve post-war housing shortage [2].
Lagutenko, 17, came to Moscow in 1921[3] and found a job at the construction site of Kazansky Rail Terminal. There he meets Alexey Shchusev. In 1931, Lagutenko graduated from Moscow Institute of Transportation Engineers and joined Shchusev’s architectural workshop. During World War II, Logutenko worked on city camouflage and repairs of war losses.
In 1947, in the heyday of extravagant, high-cost, low-density Stalinist architecture, City of Moscow appoints Logutenko to lead the experimental Industrial Construction Bureau, with an objective to study and design the low-cost technology suitable for fast mass construction; in 1949, he is promoted to lead Workhop No.1. He was not alone; parallel projects were tackled by traditional architects (Ivan Zholtovsky) and technologists (Rosenfeld and Pomazanov’s blocks on Peschanaya Street). Logutenko differentiated from them by focusing on low-cost prefab concrete and completely disposing with Stalinist grandeur.
His first project (1947–1950, architectural design by Mikhail Posokhin), an 8-story block south from Rosenfeld’s, used a frame structure made with prefab concrete beams and mixed concrete-masonry filling of external walls. Apartments are small, but not as small as his later designs; externally, the houses at least pretend to be Stalinist, using cornice and bas relief details, also of prefab concrete.
The end of Stalinist architecture was spelled in January 1950, when an architects’ convention, supervised by Khrushchev (then the party boss of Moscow City), declared low-cost, high-speed technologies the objective of Soviet architects. In 1953 and 1954, Logutenko supervised launch of two first prefab concrete plants in western Moscow. By the time Khrushchev finally disposed with Stalin’s architectural legacy (November 1955 decree on "stripping redundancies"), plant technology was already in place and could be copied to any big city. However, designs of 1950s were not optimized for speed and cost (not to mention that they were ugly). This optimization – in engineering and project management - took another 5 years and brought Lagutenko the title of Hero of Socialist Labor (1960).
In 1961, Lagutenko’s institute releases the infamous K-7 design of a prefab 5-story that became a symbol of khrushchyovka. Only 3 millions square meters (64 thousand units) of this type were built in Moscow in 1961-1968, but it was just a beginning. Cost cuts were everywhere, from diminutive floorplans to partitions only 4 centimeter thick. Ceiling height is usually stated as 2,48 meters, but can be as low as 2,40. Yet the structure could be topped-out in 12 days – following Lagutenko’s carefully metered project schedule, panels were assembled without mortar[4]. K-7 quality was plagued from the start. Subsequent revisions and daughter designs somehow fixed it, but where just as crumped and ugly. They were not intended to last; the so-called disposable series (сносимые серии) had a planned 25-year lifetime. In Moscow, they are being demolished since 1994 and the city intends to complete demolition by 2009[5]; they still stand in less wealthy towns.
Lagutenko worked on the same prefab concrete theme until his death in 1967.
In modern Russian language, lagutyonky is sometimes applied indiscriminately to all early khrushchyovka (not necessarily of Logutenko’s lineage).
Pop singer Ilia Lagutenko is a grandson of Vitaly Lagutenko.