
So, this is the fifth apartment. It had a luxury feature above all the others. The balcony of the house was located here.

Someone here has loved fruit lemonade. I googled the brand and it is Lithuanian, which is fairly strange. Unless the last inhabitant was a Lithuanian expat, of course.

Directly on the opposite side from the balcony was yet another kitchen and yet a different kitchen design.

Next to the kitchen was a doorway.

Which led to another small bedroom. So the upstairs was made up of two larger and one very small apartment.

That clothing would be vintage by now.

Instructions on using the indestructible: the Nokia 3310. I had one myself, but that really was a long time ago.

A book. Author: unknown. Title: unknown. But the language was Finnish.

As you can see, this is actually quite a wealthy neighbourhood: a garage for two cars and a boat.

Cosmetics commercials. And a lot of dust on the electric outlet.

More old newspapers. And yet again a shoe next to the balcony door. It looks like we’re going back now.

A vintage chair guarding the aparment door. The small one room apartment’s entrance can be seen straight ahead, I’m coming from the apartment seen in the previous pictures.

Apartment number 7. This puzzles me a bit.

Only when I saw this did I realize, that the three upstairs apartments shared one toilet. That is not a very high standard of living.

‘Please be dear to me for at least one small moment’, is how I’d translate the text.

And so we are back at the second door.

That looks like a Christmas curtain. Maybe the place was abandoned at New Year?

That is about right. There were three apartments upstairs, but if they are numbered 5 to 7 and I’ve found two downstairs, that must mean, that there are still two apartments left. Let’s try to find them in the last and longest post from this location.
By the way, that address no longer leads to this house. As loads of new houses have been built in the area in the past few decades, that one is no longer valid.