Lumber Room





THE LUMBER-ROOM

by Ilia Utekhin


(See Illustrations)

	The storage room is a model of the whole communal apartment (CA), 
it is a special CA for material objects. Apart from being used in this or that way, 
the diverse artefacts stored there belong to different owners, but have the same fate. 
They are just living here together, like people live in a CA.
	In the recent decades, when the lack of space in CAs became less sensible 
and a whole room sometimes even could remain unoccupied after the inhabitants 
had moved elsewhere, a new kind of places appeared in CAs. Instead of keeping 
their things in small storage closets of a very reduced volume and with no 
window, specially intended for this purpose, or instead of filling the corridors and 
antechambers with old furniture, the tenants used to request for their common 
use a spare room left unoccupied so that to locate there as much lumber as 
possible. At the same time, such room can often be used not only as a storage 
facility, but also for drying clothes after laundry or for smoking, that is, can 
combine several seemingly hardly compatible functions. 
	As a rule, before coming to common use, this room was the worst in the 
apartment and thus no one of the neighbours wanted to occupy it in order to 
better his own living conditions. To get such a room for someone's personal use 
was possible, but it meant that having got additional space, one lost the right to 
take part in the further struggle for much better rooms that could become 
available in the future. Neighbours usually claimed before ZHEK (housing administration) 
that the room in question was not fit for living - and thus for placing there to eventual newcomers. 
They adduced such arguments as bad state of the ceiling due to repeated leakage, 
scarce light because of a small window or too bad sound insulation. The technical 
commission of ZHEK recognised this fact officially, giving to the room a special 
status of auxiliary space intended for common use.	
Although all the regulations contain an unambiguous ban on encumbering 
the corridors and antechambers with old furniture and the like, hardly ever existed a CA with no 
wardrobes or  tables outside the living rooms that in spite of the regulations block 
up the passage. These pieces of furniture are private and so in a way they have "privatised" 
zones of common space. They may be regarded as functional in 
case if clothes and footwear are stored there, but often they contain the things 
very rarely used, which have no place for them in the living rooms. Being on the 
periphery of the owners' activities, they take their correspondent place on the 
periphery of the living space. However, among the things used on special 
occasions, there are many ones which cannot be held in wardrobes or carton 
boxes. These are, for instance, bicycles and sledges, skis and ski-sticks, etc., that 
usually were placed hanging from the ceiling or from the walls in classic CA 
period. When a free room for common use appears, all these things are being 
moved into it.
	 CA tenants do not reflect the main function of this room in the word they 
use for it. They do not call it "storage room" and, strictly speaking, they are right, 
because lumber-room is another place in the apartment, though usually fallen into 
disuse since the new facility became available for analogous purposes. It is called 
"empty room", "dark" or "black" room. Sometimes it is referred to as "smoking 
room" according to its secondary (and not always present) function, or "drying 
room" (Russian: "sushil'naia"), or by the name of its former inhabitant ("X's 
room"), the more so if any stories about X and his life in this room are 
remembered, or any elements of interior decoration remind of him.
	No key is required to enter this room, the door is usually open.  A weak 
bulb without lampshade, as it is typical for common use places, casts its poor 
light on this ensemble of heterogeneous objects. Here is an attempt to classify 
provisionally a typical content of such lumber-room:
a) all kinds of empty containers of different types, sizes and materials, such as 
wooden and carton boxes, especially those initially used for domestic appliance 
and electronics, or parcel boxes, as well as baskets and chests; some of them 
filled with lesser objects from other categories; 
b) among the containers: used handbags, suitcases, rucksacks etc., which 
eventually contain something, but many of them empty;
c) empty bottles and jars in bags, boxes, on the shelves, or right on the floor;
d) used footwear and clothes of all sizes, in different containers (from wardrobes 
to cartons) or without them, just hanging from the walls (clothes) or put on the 
floor (footwear); clothes fit for a different season (winter clothes in summer and 
summer clothes, in winter);
e) rags; often there are whole sacks or cartons full of rags;
f) wash-basins, wash-tubs, mainly damaged ones (those which are actually used 
for laundry are placed in the bath-room or in the corridor, often hanging on the 
walls);
g) buckets, brooms, a floor-cloth, etc. tools for cleaning, of private and common 
use; the private ones include vacuum-cleaners;
h) tools for repair and maintenance, such as ladders, paint-brushes and jars with 
paint; in separate boxes or old cases, metalwork and joinery tools, jars or little 
cartons full of screws and nails; some axes, saws and spades;
i) construction materials for repairs of the apartment and country houses 
(dachas); 
j) various domestic equipment, usually broken and out of use: tv-sets, radios, 
freezers, vacuum-cleaners, electric irons (and non-electric ones, at best used 
today as weights for sauerkraut);
k) all sorts of broken lamps and lighting devices with their lampshades and 
cables, or separate details of them; 
l) old and mostly broken furniture of all kinds;
m) rolled up carpets; curtains, coverlets, blankets;
n) folding beds and chaises longues (some of them broken)
o) bicycles, sledges, skis and other sporting equipment; details of bicycles, 
especially wheels; hand carts and prams;
p) old books (often schoolbooks among them) packed in cartons or piled on the 
floor; old LPs; old copybooks and notepads of actual and former school-children or 
students;
q) the same as p), but regarded as waste paper fit for pulp ("makulatura") and 
prepared to be brought to a special shop of utility waste; 
r) garbage;
	This list gives a general idea and cannot be exhaustive. That is because 
you can only grasp the principle, but you cannot predict exactly the result of its 
implementation, as any particular circumstances have their speciality: if, for 
instance, there were musical instruments in a family, they (or their parts) could 
be moved one day to the storage room. Nevertheless, the categories outlined 
above are typical and almost obligatory. Of course, we can legitimately add to the 
list "s)" used objects of relatively big size, related to someone"s old and 
abandoned hobbies", and give even more detailed account, mentioning 
photographic enlargers etc. But the keywords "old", "used", "objects", 
"abandoned" which, taken together, seem to make the definition of "s)" 
somewhat redundant. We can infer that old toys and broken umbrellas also take 
refuge here. Another key-phrase would be "used on special occasions" for 
auxiliary domestic tools of small material value. Thus, special ritual appliance to 
install the Christmas-tree will also be here (though Christmas-tree toys and 
adornments will be not, as they are more valuable and could easily be stolen). In 
storage room, a close surveillance on the property is not performed, and so this is 
a matter of confidence between neighbours; however, the confidence is limited. 
	To explain this list of objects would mean to understand the structure of 
the environment of artefacts in CAs, as well as the logic of their life-cycle, and 
maybe also the human relations implied in this logic. Let us start from the end of 
the list: r) garbage. It is not always that you can find garbage in a lumber-room, 
until you regard as garbage the things from j, k, l, p, and q. However, 
often "r" = "garbage" (recognised as garbage by its owner) is relevant. Why to 
store it in the apartment? Why isn"t it in the dump? 
	The most obvious reason is the need to apply an effort so that to bring the 
garbage to the dump, which is a part of the whole economy of time and everyday 
life efforts. If an object (a broken piece of furniture or a sack of garbage, say, 
construction garbage after repair works) is big and heavy enough, one person is 
unable to do such work and needs a help. To look for the neighbours" help is 
another effort, whereas having space resources to storage, one can put off this 
work for indefinitely long. This fits well in "minimum effort for the maintenance 
of stable environment" principle. The garbage is not in the living-rooms. It is a 
sort of "out of sight, out of mind" attitude. 
	Another consideration is what I would call "the reverence for rubbish". 
Initially motivated by poverty and, correspondingly, by the tendence to exhaust 
all which can be used in a thing, this reverence means a vague idea that 
everything, no matter how old and broken, may be used again some day, in this 
or that way. Generally, poverty and reduced space increase the number of 
valences of things: thus, chairs are also used as temporary shelves, irons or piles 
of books as weights, old newspapers as table-clothes, jars as vases, etc. This is 
regarded as normal. The life of things is thus enlarged and prolonged. The more 
so as some men know how to repair things which are currently in use, for which 
purpose they can find some useful pieces in the lumber. This line of thinking is 
even kept on when the space is not so small, the poverty is not so acute. The 
wish to preserve the things from discarding is a by-product of this approach. A 
good illustration of it can be seen in the rows of empty jars which are never used 
in this quantity and, however, remain on the shelves and in carton boxes (inside 
them the jars are enveloped in old newspapers) instead of going to the dump. A 
small number of jars would be, probably, useful for those who make vegetable 
and fruit preserves, but such abundance of them is evidently useless.
	In CAs, the things have a tendence to stop on the half-way to dump - and 
the storage room is a convenient place. Newcomers who have lived in a separate 
apartment, especially young women, sometimes doesn't understand their 
neighbours' attitude towards lumber and explain it, saying that "it is because 
they never have lived in a separate apartment where there is no place for 
lumber". This explanation is only partly valid because the experience shows that 
some of the former CA inhabitants even after having moved to a relatively 
reduced space of a separate apartment go on collecting lumber and filling with it 
all the corners and even whole rooms.
	Clearly, such attitude creates some problems: however big is the storage 
space - and often it is not - it is, nevertheless, limited, and thus a rotation is 
necessary to bring some things to the end of the way (the dump) and to leave 
place to new things. The common practice when rearranging the things in the 
storage room is to propose some objects to the neighbours as a gift. It can be an 
old tv-set which needs a small repair, or a piece of furniture. Curiously, although 
such gifts may be also proposed immediately after having bought a new thing 
instead of an old one, more usually the things pass some time in the lumber-room 
before being given.
	On the periphery the feeling of possession is weaker. If a neighbour"s thing 
which is obviously out of use seems useful to someone, it is not unusual to go 
and ask the neighbour whether this or that thing is still needed to him, and ask 
permission to take it. E.g.," I've found there on your shelf a whole treasure of 
science fiction. I've taken some books. Is it all right?" The man asking this 
question is sure that it is all right, but regards necessary and polite to give notice 
to the proprietor of the books. In another case, one informer found that some 
very interesting magazines were torn and put into the bag on the interior side of 
the toilet door, where the paper is intended to put on the lavatory seat. He knew 
who was the owner of the magazines. It was not difficult, because earlier they 
were stored in the storage room, where the space is distributed strictly enough. 
So he asked for the magazines and received them. However, this freedom 
observing and even taking others' possessions opens the way to eventual abuse. 
The local drunkard is sometimes suspected to steal (e.g., empty bottles and jars) 
from the storage room, in order to get money for them, and the question is then 
discussed whether to lock the door and to distribute the keys among the 
neighbours, but usually all is kept as it is.
	The links with the things weaken with the time. Some things remain in the 
storage room since so long ago that hardly anybody, except for the old men, 
remembers what it is and who is the propietor. It is from the location that the 
proprietor (who can be already dead or have moved elsewhere) always can be 
established. After the death or move, the place is inherited by that who occupies 
the room of the gone neighbour. The place can remain intact for long time, and 
free from things after all them were taken by the heirs who may distribute a part 
of the heritage among the neighbours, or just brought to the dump. If there is no 
pretenders to the place (e.g., no one comes to live in the room, or its new 
inhabitants do not pretend to use the storage room), it is gradually divided by 
those who need it. See Fig.___  for empty hooks and nails: no one has yet 
occupied this corner.  
	The general tendence to have more order in more tough conditions usually 
is reflected also in the state of the storage room, though CAs vary considerably in 
who and how regularly cleans the storage room (if it is regularly cleaned up at 
all). The bad state of the room, which has been an important argument to 
recognise the room as a place of common use, is not modified. No one is thinking 
about repairs, whitewashing of ceilings, papering the walls etc. The floor is hardly 
ever washed here. It is a logical result, for this room is generally less controlled 
and the order here is not so important to the community. Thus, even if 
someone's drunk guest or simply a drunk neighbour falls asleep here, it is not 
serious matter if somebody reveals this fact. It does not usually lead to a scandal, 
as it would be if the same took place elsewhere in the apartment.  
	Children like to come to the lumber-room and to play here or just to regard 
its content that is exciting their interest. Principally, it is not prohibited, but 
sometimes parents say that it is too dusty or that the children can damage a 
neighbour's things. They don't approve the children's playing here. Apart from 
the smokers, frequent visitors of the storage room are old men, who check the 
integrity of their possessions or rearrange them periodically.
	There are big CAs with no storage room. This does not mean, of cause, 
that the attitude towards rubbish is different there. The corners of the corridor, 
big shelves attached to the walls or suspended over the heads (if the height of 
the ceiling allows such construction), the antechamber - all these still 
successfully play the role of storage room, as in the classic period. Classic 
descriptions of the whole barricades built of furniture, bicycles etc. are still 
relevant to some extent. An important difference in this case is that commonly 
the places for shelves, hooks and wardrobes are distributed definitely and strictly, 
and the property is protected more jealously. This is my corner, not a common 
storage room. Here is my property and my expansion to the common space. If I 
see someone making something in my possessions, it automatically means a 
quarrel. The storage room, on the contrary, is open and not so closely controlled. 
	The difference between big lumber-rooms and small auxiliary storage 
facilities (in CAs where the both types of storage place are present) is in location 
and content. Usually the small specialised facilities are attached to the kitchen 
and mainly contain common use tools for cleaning, so no place in left for lumber. 
Another specialised storage facility is a larder; to some extent it may adopt 
several types of objects characteristic to lumber-room. The wide spreading of 
refrigerators and the use of the improvised refrigerators arranged as shelves on a 
window (Figs.__) have diminished the proper value of larders, and so they have 
become an asylum for dusty jars. Today, mice and rats are mostly gone (it is in 
the larder that the traps usually were put).  

 


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