In Part 2 of this conversation, guest host Diana Kruzman continues speaking with Irina Sokhodov and Olena Rybak about practical strategies for energy resilience and high-performance reconstruction.
They explain how well-insulated buildings can stay livable longer during energy disruptions, and what it takes to upgrade older multi-family buildings—financially and socially—through grants, loans, and homeowner cooperation. The guests also share real project examples: new social housing developments, NZEB (nearly zero energy) school rehabilitations, and municipal infrastructure upgrades that combine renewables, storage, and efficiency to strengthen reliability for communities.
This episode highlights a simple theme: better building performance isn’t just sustainability—it’s comfort, continuity, and resilience.
Why Listen?
00:00 – Intro
00:30 – Building resilience: how long well-insulated buildings can “hold heat”
03:00 – What comfort looks like in older buildings (real-life temperature reality)
05:30 – Retrofitting older apartment blocks: what’s possible + what’s hard
08:00 – Funding pathways: grants, resident contributions, and bank loans
11:00 – The biggest barrier: getting residents aligned (housing unions)
14:00 – Speed vs sustainability: why retrofits won’t scale fast enough alone
16:30 – Project highlight: new social housing + green certification example
19:00 – Case study: a citywide master-planning approach to guide donors
25:00 – Off-grid residential pilot: PV + storage + heat pumps
28:30 – NZEB schools pilot: going beyond code with renewables + efficiency
31:30 – Municipal resilience: renewables + storage for water/heating services
34:00 – Closing reflections: hope through action + measurable results
36:00 – Outro + subscribe reminder