All kinds. Much depends on whether they live in a town or city or out in the rural areas. Apartments are quite common, but single-family dwellings also exist.
If you're talking about "traditional" in the folk-style sense, they lived in wooden cabins (izba), generally with a single large room that had a very large stone oven for cooking and heating the house, and a smaller attic section sometimes.
Most Russians live in western Russia, particularly in cities such as Moscow and St. Petersburg. Eastern Russia, which includes regions such as Siberia and the Russian Far East, is more sparsely populated.
Russians live in Russia because that is the country of their births.Note: Today, the name of Russia is "Union of Soviet Socialist Republics" (U.S.S.R.), also called Soviet Union Russian or Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik, or Sovetsky SoyuzNote: Russians have and do migrate to live in other countries across the world.
Korean people predominantly live in apartments or high-rise buildings due to limited space in urban areas. Traditional Korean houses called hanok can still be found in some rural areas or preserved historic districts. These houses typically have a wooden structure with tiled roofs and a courtyard.
Dutch people commonly live in row houses, apartments, or detached single-family homes. Row houses are especially prevalent in cities, while suburban areas typically feature single-family homes. Modern architecture and sustainable design principles are also becoming increasingly popular in the Netherlands.
The Maori people traditionally lived in houses called "whare." These houses were made from wood and thatch, featuring a central hearth for cooking and warmth. The size and structure of the whare varied based on the tribe and region.
Russians live in house like ours today but back in ancient Russia they did not always live like this
They live in regular houses.
They live in regular houses.
they lived in houses
They live in longhouses
long houses
The same kind of houses westerners live in for the most part however the impoverished ones do live in slum dwellings
they live in teepes
they live in igloos
they live in house
They live in caravans.
not most of them because they do own a lot of land but not alot of animals I am Russian, I do not think that most of Russians live in the own houses, it is common only in villages, in the cities and towns people live in the block flats and appartments. Lately there is a tendency that villages are disappearing.