It was the latest attack to damage cultural buildings and cultural heritage in the country. According to Ukraine's culture ministry, the Russian army has “destroyed or damaged 1,723 cultural heritage sites and 2,524 cultural infrastructure sites in Ukraine” since 2022.
‘We could
hear the roof collapsing’: how Russian missiles devastated Kyiv’s cultural
sites
Russia’s
recent assault killed two people, injured 90 more and significantly damaged
many of the capital’s museums
Charlotte
Higgins and Mariana Matveichuk in Kyiv Photographs by Julia Kochetova
Sat 30
May 2026 07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/may/30/russian-missiles-devastated-kyiv-cultural-sites
For four years, Vitalina Martynovska and her team
had been working on a complete transformation of Kyiv’s National Chornobyl
Museum.
The new
sleek displays were designed to tell a fresh story about the reactor explosion
of 26 April 1986 – the most serious nuclear accident in history, a factor that
contributed to the collapse of the Soviet Union, and an event that continues to
shape Ukraine’s identity today.
The
museum was to be devoted not just to the extraordinary work of the
“liquidators” who did the initial cleanup after the explosion. It was also the
story “of all the people whose lives changed after the disaster”, said
Martynovska, the museum’s director.
It
reopened to visitors on 26 April, 40 years to the day since the nuclear
disaster.
Then,
less than a month later, on the night of 23 May, a shock wave from a Russian
missile engulfed the museum’s handsome historic building, a former fire
station.
Five days
later, a still profoundly shocked Martynovska was standing among the museum’s
charred remains. Firefighters toiled amid the absolute destruction of
everything she and her team had worked so hard to create.
“There is
practically no room in the museum that has not suffered damage,” she said. “The
building itself sustained significant damage, the roof was destroyed, the floor
between the second and third storeys was destroyed, and collapsed; the
exhibition rooms and the museum laboratory were affected.”
About 40%
of the irreplaceable artefacts on display, according to early assessments, were
destroyed.
Martynovska
first heard that her building was on fire around 5am on 24 May. Through the
night, Russia sent 60 missiles and 600 drones to Ukraine, most of which were
targeted at the capital. The attack killed two people and injured 90 more and
significantly damaged many of Kyiv’s museums and culturally significant
buildings.
“Twenty
minutes later, I was already there,” she said. “The first thing I saw was thick
smoke and flames on the roof. The windows, doors and gates that were part of
this building were already lying on the ground nearby.
“Given
that I had been working on the restoration project with the team and on the
project to build a new exhibition over the last four years, you can imagine
what a heavy blow this was for me.”
As soon
as the emergency workers allowed, she and the chief curator plunged into the
building to try to save what they could. “We began evacuating the artefacts
while the roof was still ablaze and the firefighting operation was still under
way,” she said. “We could hear the roof collapsing. We were constantly wading
through water.”
As she
spoke, emergency workers were making safe a space that had housed a display
about the Chornobyl area before the building of the power plant. The artefacts
included old Bibles, books, icons and ceramics, most of which were destroyed. A
text on the wall describing the room’s theme remained intact – translated, it
read, “Lost worlds”.
The
museum stores – housing the bulk of the collection of 22,000 artefacts – were
safe, she said. And she had some hope that the 40% loss of artefacts on display
may be revised down a little. She was clutching a pretty earthenware jug that
the emergency workers had found in the blackened wreckage. They had also found,
she said, the tail of a missile.
Across
town, wind and rain were blowing into the elegant Doric-pedimented building
housing the National Art Museum of Ukraine (Namu). Shock waves had blown out
nearly all its windows, ceilings were partly down and panels from its huge
wooden front doors had been flung across the foyer. The sculpture of Apollo
that sits atop its pediment had cracked.
Its
collection – ranging from ancient icons to old masters and Ukrainian modernists
– is in storage or out on tour abroad. During the full-scale invasion, it has
been hosting temporary exhibitions: the current show, titled Sunrise, of works
by the 20th-century painter Anatoly Limarev, was protected from the onslaught
of glass and debris by the temporary walls erected in the exhibition space,
which acted as baffle walls. Since the attack, the exhibition has been hastily
uninstalled and taken to safety.
In one of
its elegant galleries, the head of exhibitions, a senior conservator and two
students from Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, attached to the institution for part of
their art history degree, were shovelling rubble into carts.
“It’s
definitely an internship they won’t forget,” said the museum spokesperson
Veronika Bublei.
In the
early morning of 24 May, she said, it was “stress, horrible – we were running
about trying to do what we could and there was no time for emotion – or we
turned the stress into trying to do something practical.
“It felt
like the epicentre of a tempest, with all the doors and windows blown out – as
if a tornado had blown through the building.”
“My
initial feeling was one of shock,” said Namu’s director, Yulia Lytvynets, who,
like the rest of her team, was dressed in workwear as the staff continued with
the back-breaking cleanup operation on Thursday. “We understand that there is a
war going on. Our halls are empty and our art is safe. But you’ll never be 100%
ready for something like this. Even if you hide your collection, you can’t hide
the building.”
The
museum had been preparing its next exhibition devoted to the modernist theatre
designer Anatol Petrytskyi. That will now go ahead online, she said. The
building is now closed to the public indefinitely.
Numerous
cultural buildings and institutions were reported damaged in the city after the
night’s attacks, including the Zhytnyi market, a masterpiece of 1980s
modernism.
It was
the latest attack to damage cultural buildings and cultural heritage in the
country. According to Ukraine’s culture ministry, the Russian army has
“destroyed or damaged 1,723 cultural heritage sites and 2,524 cultural
infrastructure sites in Ukraine” since 2022.
Fire had
raged through a mall and market in the Lukianivka district of the city. At the
Mala Opera, a performance venue across the street from the burned-out shopping
mall, the venue’s chief technician, Oleksandr Buryma, was fitting plastic
sheeting over blown-out windows as a temporary fix. The roof, he said, was
damaged and a section of wall blown out at the rear.
But the
early 20th-century venue, once a cultural centre for tram workers and now a
beloved small-scale stage for theatre and music, was still planning to go ahead
with its performance on the evening of 29 May: Railroad, a play by the US
writer Bryan Reynolds set amid the rise of nazism, he said.
In this
case, the show – if it possibly could – would go on.


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