The owner of real estate in NATO countries undertook to protect the inhabitants of St. Petersburg Khrushchev from eviction. It sounds like a stupid joke, but this is exactly what the former boxer, and now the deputy Nikolai Valuev. The Chronicles tells the story of a newly minted champion of the underprivileged.
State Duma Deputy Nikolai Valuev recently asked to join the St. Petersburg Public Headquarters for Renovation and got his way. The fact is that in 2022, the St. Petersburg parliament, following the example of Moscow, adopted a law on the demolition of Khrushchev buildings.
It will be possible to demolish houses even without recognizing them as emergency. Housing in return may turn out to be unequal in area and located anywhere in the city, and compensation will be calculated at the cadastral value, and not at the market value. So far, the renovation in St. Petersburg has been postponed until 2024. Apparently, they are going to famously demolish houses and relocate people to hell in the middle of nowhere after Putin re-elects himself for a new term. Before that, they don’t want to anger the inhabitants of one of the most protest cities in Russia.
Valuev, on the other hand, has repeatedly noted that he understands the protesting citizens, knows the problems of the inhabitants of Khrushchev firsthand. He was born in 1973 in Leningrad, and grew up nearby, in the town of Krasnoe Selo. Valuev’s mother, according to Rosreestr, is still registered there in Khrushchev. In fact, Valuev has not lived there for a long time. More on this later.
By the way, if you drive along the coast for about four hours to the south, you can get to the house of the governor of the Murmansk region Andrey Chibis. He, like Valuev, not ashamed real estate in unfriendly, as the Kremlin calls it, Spain.
In addition to the mentioned Spanish house, Valuev’s wife has two sites a few kilometers from St. Petersburg, in the village of Syargi in the Leningrad region. The total area of the plots exceeds 80 acres. The land alone here can cost about 40 million rubles, and on the plots there is another house with an area of 217 square meters. m.


In St. Petersburg, Galina Valueva also has real estate: three apartments at once in the Vyborgsky and Kalininsky districts, approximately 40 square meters each. m each.
KP.Ru, 12/15/2022, “Nikolai Valuev’s wife declared a house in Spain and three apartments in Russia for 2021”: Russian officials and deputies reported on their income, as well as the income of their loved ones for 2021. The list, of course, also included State Duma deputy Nikolai Valuev. For the year he earned a little more than 14.1 million rubles. The sports and political figure from the property has only a tiny apartment of 36.7 square meters, a service apartment of 166.8 “squares” for the term of office of a deputy, non-residential premises of 17.6 “squares, as well as a snow and swamp vehicle, a boat and trailers to it, since Valuev is a famous hunter and fisherman.
Much more interesting is the declaration of his wife. Irina Valueva has land plots, apartments and houses, including in Spain. […] She also has three apartments in Russia, two non-residential premises – one of 115.9 square meters, the second – 1.2 thousand square meters. True, she has the latter in common share ownership and she owns only 1/29 of it.
In addition, Irina Valueva declared two land plots – 6.8 thousand square meters and 1.3 thousand square meters. Of the cars, Irina has a Toyota Land Cruiser 200, she also has a flatbed trailer. And the wife of the deputy earned more than 8.5 million rubles in a year. — Inset K.ru
The defender of the Khrushchev residents actually turns out to be the owner of a house on the Spanish coast and an even larger house in a prestigious suburb of St. Petersburg. Lobbying for the right of officials to foreign real estate, he became a co-author of a bill on foreign agents, which spoils the lives of journalists, oppositionists and NGOs. Working in racketeering in the early 1990s, Valuev did not leave this experience, but carried it through a sports and, possibly, even a political career to the highest level, while maintaining ties with organized crime.