I don't know the exact name of this neighborhood, but it merges with the center. And yet this is the outskirts on the east side of the city. Maybe the locals call it PPM (Pulp and paper mill), because the plant is very close.

There are no abandoned houses here, but they, like everyone else, are dilapidated.
There are different types of houses.
There are very cozy places.
There are some and not so many...One woman, getting out of the car, asked me in a man's voice what I was filming.
I replied that I was photographing a snow-covered tree.
She praised me with obscene words and left.
But in general, it's still more comfortable and quieter here than in Pechatkino.
Most of all, I liked Soldek, which is on the other side of the river behind the railway.
I have not yet passed the center itself, which is a very central center.
Where there are brick and panel high-rise buildings.
I will definitely do it.
And I also want to consolidate the overall atmosphere of the city through daytime street scenes.
I've never taken off during the day in Sokol.
The city is nearby, so anything is possible.
In the meantime, this is the last post about Sokol's courtyards for the near future.