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  • Monday Open 24 hours
  • Tuesday Open 24 hours
  • Wednesday Open 24 hours
  • Thursday Open 24 hours
  • Friday Open 24 hours
  • Saturday Open 24 hours
  • Sunday Open 24 hours
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Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Mansion Countess Uvarova
Reviews
Stephen G (09/25/2019)
Beautiful building for hosting events. Stunning interior rooms. Lots of repair needed on back of house. Overall, a great venue. (P.S. Suggestion: Clean up the trash & debris in the rear yard. What's with that?)
Kate V (02/29/2020)
It's splendid inside, however, you can't just go in, because all the doors are locked and the man who keeps the keys would like you to help his financial situation a bit)) He says he can share a load of information about the building and the people who used to live in there, but the reality is, those are just facts from the internet and only in russian/ukrainian ofc. And even if you tell him you know everything, he will not let you go alone for free. So, yes, it is free, but only formally.
Михаил Лемарк (04/21/2018)
Good
Lyoka Gr (11/27/2020)
Once a beautiful mansion with a luxurious garden (almost nothing is left of it). Empire style. Stucco molding. Gilding. Bohemian glass. Cupids. Doric columns. Marble fireplaces. The noble family nest of the Uvarov counts, created for beauty and luxury, after the 18th radically changes its purpose. In 1918, the mansion was requisitioned by the Germans. Field Marshal Hermann von Eichhorn, commander of Army Group Kiev, lived in the former family nest of the Uvarovs. In the 1930s, the mansion housed the NKVD, and after the war, until 1987, the KGB. In 1987, the mansion was handed over to the Ukrainian Cultural Foundation. It also houses the Institute of National Memory and the offices of several companies.
Viktoriia Kartashova ART (12/08/2020)
The most beautiful mansion of Countess Natalya Uvarova, daughter of the sugar refinery patron Tereshchenko. Built before the revolution in the Empire style. It was visited by royal persons. The Countess sold the mansion in 2017 and moved to Paris. After the revolution, hard times came for the mansion, bad fame went about it, here in Soviet times there was the KGB, then the SBU. Now it is the Institute of National Memory.
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