Mezhyhirya Residence

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
(Redirected from Mezhyhirya (residence))
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Mezhyhiria
Museum
Honka in Mezhyhirya.jpg
Major landmark: "Honka" club house
Official name: Pushcha-Vodytsia recreational complex at Mezhyhiria tract
Name origin: Saint Transfiguration Monastery
Nickname: Mezhyhiria
Country Ukraine
Region Kiev Oblast
District Vyshhorod Raion
Municipality Novi Petrivtsi village
Founded 1935; 89 years ago (1935)
Government National government property
  • Ukraine (1991-present)
  • Soviet Union (1935-1991)
Owner Private ownership
  • firms related to the Yanukovych family (2007-2014)
Location of Mezhyhirya

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Since mid-November 2014, Mezhyhirya (Ukrainian: Межигір'я, pronounced [mɛʐɪˈɦʲirjɐ] Mežihìr’â) has been a museum that displays the luxury of its former owner, former President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych,[1][2] The estate is located in the village of Novi Petrivtsi, Vyshhorod Raion.[3][4][5] Yanukovych lived in it from 2002 to 21 February 2014, when he abandoned the estate during the 2014 Ukrainian revolution.[6][7]

The estate is over 140 ha (350 acres) and is situated on the banks of the Dnieper river (Kiev Reservoir).[8] From 1935 to 2007 Mezhyhirya was a state government residence until it was turned into private property. In 2012 the State Administration of Affairs rented a space from Tantalit for 99,691 hryvnia per year, arranging it for official receptions.[9][10][11]

Internet newspaper Ukrayinska Pravda in its investigation published a number of documents that confirm a link between those organizations-tenants, family members of Yanukovych and his entourage.[12] The 140-hectares Mezhyhirya complex is enclosed by a five meter tall fence along the 54 km (34 mi) perimeter.[13] On its territory are located a yacht pier, equestrian club, shooting range, tennis court and many other recreational tourism complexes[14] as well as hunting grounds.[15] The lease of 1 ha (2.5 acres) in Mezhyhirya for Yanukovych cost 314 hryvnia per month (2010)[16] which was about $39.57 according to the exchange rate.[17]

Another, perhaps even more luxurious residence was under construction near Cape Aya in Crimea at the time of the 2014 Ukrainian Revolution which ousted Yanukovych from office.[18] Journalists call it "Mezhyhirya №2".

The complexes at the site also include an automobile museum displaying some of Yanukoviche's former exotic cars, a golf course, ostrich farm, dog kennel, numerous fountains, man made lakes, a helicopter pad, and a small church.

History

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Until April 10, 1786, the space now occupied by the modern residence was inhabited by the Savior-Transfiguration Monastery, the establishment of which is attributed prior to the period of princely epoch in Kiev, which was liquidated by the Russian Imperial edict of Catherine the Great. A year later, the monastery was set on fire, supposedly on the order of the same Catherine the Great. Ukrainian poet Taras Shevchenko wrote about the incident: "As tsaritsa with Nechesa walked around Kiev and the Mezhyhirya Savior she set on fire at night".[19] At the end of the 19th century the monastery was restored as a female monastery called "Intercession of the Saints", but in 1923 was once again closed by the Bolsheviks. During 1923–1931 the monastery building was used by as a college for ceramic production. Former cells of the monastery became occupied by a commune of artists-monumentalists. In 1931 the college was moved to Kiev. At the same year the iconostasis of the Savior-Transfiguration Monastery was destroyed.[20]

Mezhyhirya is also the former summer house of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union's leaders since 1935.[8][not in citation given] During the occupation by Nazi Germany, it was a residence of the Reich Commissar Erich Koch in a palace of the Kiev Military District commander Iona Yakir.[21] Before its privatization by the President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych (at that time Prime Minister of Ukraine), the residence belonged to the State recreation complex Pushcha Vodytsia.

Transformation into private property

Stepping into the post of Prime Minister of Ukraine in 2002, Viktor Yanukovych received free of charge building #20 with an area 325 m2 (3,500 sq ft) in the residence from the Fund of State Property. On April 1, 2003 Viktor Yanukovych rented building #20 and 3 ha (7.4 acres) of land through the mediation of Donetsk Charity Fund "Revival of Ukraine". By the agreement, the rental price was 3.14 hryvnia per month for a period of 49 years for the purpose "implementation of measures for the promotion of national and international programs aimed at improving the socio-economic status".[6]

Stepping out of the post of Prime Minister of Ukraine in 2005, Yanukovych received another building, #20-a.

In 2009 Yanukovych claimed to have full ownership.[2] He has not revealed the price he paid for the property, instead calling it a "very serious price".[22]

President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych chose it as his residence after he won the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election.[8] This ownership was contested.[8] Serhiy Leshchenko, of Ukrayinska Pravda, has claimed Yanukovych owned more of the estate than he claimed, and that he managed to do so through a complex ownership structure via a network of international holding companies that ultimately comes back to a firm called Tantalit, run by a lawyer close to the Yanukovych family, Pavlo Lytovchenko.[8] The estate's level of luxury and the reconstruction of a road to it spawned controversy within Ukraine.[4][8]

Transformation into museum

On 21 February 2014 the police units that had guarded the residence during Euromaidan withdrew and protesters were able to enter it.[7] Following that, thousands of Ukrainians went to visit this luxurious palace and park for free, after Yanukovych moved to Russia on 21 February 2014.[7][23] Activists of Automaidan took care of the residence from the moment it was abandoned by security forces and turned it into a public park.[24] On 23 February 2014 the Ukrainian parliament adopted a resolution on the transfer of Mezhyhirya (as a recreational complex of Pushcha-Vodytsia) to state ownership.[25] It returned to state ownership via court action on 25 June 2014.[26] Since mid-November 2014 the estate is a museum.[1]

Former owners (2009 - 2014)

Euromaidan on the road to Mezhyhirya
Security, with concealed shoulder sleeve insignia.
No. Legal entity Area (ha)
1 Tantalit 129.0
2 Revival of Ukraine 7.6
3 Viktor Yanukovych 1.8
Total 138.4
  • Tantalit, LLC (Ukrainian: ТОВ "Танталіт")
  • Charitable Fund "Revival of Ukraine" (Ukrainian: Благодійний фонд "Відродження України")

Renters

The State Administration of Affairs rents an office in the residence.[27]

Security services

In November 2011 "UkrAeroRukh" made Yanukovych's part of the Mezhyhirya residence a no-fly zone.[31]

Featuring objects

"Honka" club house, a view across the Kiev Reservoir
External images
image icon Débarcadère interior
image icon Chandeliers
image icon Portholes
image icon Lavatory
External video
video icon Yanukovych shows Mezhyhirya

Club house (Honka)

The main feature of the residence is the so-called "club house", also known as "object Honka" (after the Finnish company Honka).[32] The building is located on territory belonging to the charitable fund "Revival of Ukraine".[11]

During 2009 and the first half of 2010, materials worth 76 million hryvnia ($9.5 million) were delivered, for renovation of the house.[11]

In 2010, speaking before the German public in Berlin, Viktor Yanukovych actually refuted his previous statements that he had nothing other than his house on the territory of "Mezhyhirya". Speaking that in his personal life he prefers "German quality", he noted: "It's no big secret to anyone... I built one such house, a club house... It was built by "Honka", a Finnish company..."[33]

Barge

According to Ukrayinska Pravda, a reception house was designed for Viktor Yanukovych in 2011, based on a barge that was brought to Mezhyhirya and moored in the inner harbor (Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.). Officially, it is registered to the company Tantalit.[34] The length of the "palace on the water" is around 50 m (160 ft). The windows are decorated as round portholes.[32]

As reported by Ukrayinska Pravda, the barge has a personal office and a hall for receptions. The "palace" is decorated with wood of valuable species, gold leaf, marble and crystal.[32] In the niche of the ceiling of the main hall, there are three chandeliers, the price of one of which was estimated by Ukrayinska Pravda at $97,000.[34]

Books

A journalist at Ukrayinska Pravda found various "ancient treasures of Ukrainian literature" in the residence on 25 February 2014, including the alleged first printed book in Ukraine (dating from 1654) by Ivan Fyodorov.[35]

Photo gallery

Honka club house

Other features

360° panoramic photos of Mezhyhirya

A group of photographers made a series of 360° panoramic photos outside and inside the buildings in Mezhyhirya on 11 March 2014, available on the website of the German political magazine Der Spiegel.[36]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Ukraine: Former President Viktor Yanukovych's Palatial Residence in Mezhyhirya Opens as Museum, International Business Times (November 17, 2014)
  2. 2.0 2.1 (Ukrainian) Янукович заявляет, что он - законный владелец резиденции «Межгорье» Yanukovych said that he - the rightful owner of the residence Mezhyhirya, UNIAN (7 August 2009)
  3. (Ukrainian) На "Межигір'я" рушила колона автомобілів: активісти хочуть заблокувати президента On the way to the residence of the President of activists stopped by the Berkut, Televiziyna Sluzhba Novyn (1 December 2013)
  4. 4.0 4.1 Yanukovych’s smooth ride to Mezhyhirya mansion, Kyiv Post (19 August 2010)
  5. Euromaidan activists depart for Mezhyhirya residence, Interfax-Ukraine (6 December 2013)
    Traffic on road towards Mezhyhirya residence blocked off by police – media, Interfax-Ukraine (6 December 2013)
  6. 6.0 6.1 Leshchenko, S. Life of the state elite: freebie apartment for Viktor Yanukovych. Ukrayinska Pravda. December 29, 2009
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Ukraine Leader Was Defeated Even Before He Was Ousted, New York Times (3 January 2015)
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 Ukraine elections marked by curses, threats and brutality, theguardian.com (26 October 2012)
  9. Yanukovych will forget way to work? For him was built an office in Mezhyhirya. Ukrayinska Pravda. February 26, 2012
  10. For office in Mezhyhirya Yanukovych will pay from the Budget 100 thousand per year to its own company. Ukrayinska Pravda. March 2, 2012
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Leshchenko, S. Viktor Yanukovych: We building new country. Within Mezhyhirya. Ukrayinska Pravda. April 7, 2010. Accessed February 15, 2014
  12. Leshchenko, S. Is Yanukovich going to legalize Mezhyhirya?. Ukrayinska Pravda. July 29, 2010
  13. Serov, I., Homon, D., Kasianova, I. In Mezhyhirya Yanukovych has a zoo, aerodrome, and orangery. Segodnya. June 7, 2010
  14. Leshchenko, S. Part II. Ukrayinska Pravda. April 19, 2010
  15. Leshchenko, S. Yanukovych sheltered in Mezhyhirya... the hunting club of deputies-regionalists. November 26, 2009
  16. Yanukovych rents Mezhyhirya residence for 3 hryvnia per are. TSN. June 3, 2010
  17. US Dollar to Ukraine Hryvnia (USD UAH) for 6 June 2010 (06/06/2010). Exchange Rates UK.
  18. http://www.unian.net/politics/888936-v-kryimu-otkryili-dostup-k-myisu-ayya-gde-stroili-mejigore-2-udar.html
  19. Shevchenko, T Slipyi (Blind). Collection of works in six tomes. Vol.1: Poetry 1837-1847. Kiev, 2003. 297-313; 723-725.
  20. Vechersky, V. Lost objects of architectural heritage of Ukraine. Kiev: NDITIAM - Holovkyivarkhitektura, 2002. 103-104
  21. Lysenko, V. Legends and treasures of the Mezhyhirya Abbey. "Collection of regional studies materials". Kiev 2010.
  22. Ukrayinska Pravda exposes president’s Mezhygirya deal, Kyiv Post (6 May 2009)
  23. In pictures: Luxury Ukraine presidential home revealed, BBC News (23 February 2014)
  24. Vlad Lavrov: Mezhyhirya still a symbol of Ukraine, Kyiv Post (July 24, 2014)
  25. Law of Ukraine. On returning of the government residence "Mezhyhirya" in state ownership. Verkhovna Rada. February 23, 2014
  26. Court returns land in Mezhyhirya to state, says PGO in Kyiv region, Interfax-Ukraine (25 June 2014)
  27. Yanukovych rented in Mezhyhirya private office. Tochka.net. February 27, 2012
  28. Berkut arrived to defend Yanukovych's Mezhihirya from journalists. ictv. June 6, 2013
  29. Mezhyhirya. syohodni. TVi.
  30. For the first time during the years independence near the lighthouse of Vyshhorod appeared military: "Defending Viktor Yanukovych. Do you know such? censor.net. December 5, 2012
  31. Yanukovych's residence was enclosed by the 6-meter fence and prohibited to fly over it. Mirror Weekly. November 16, 2011
  32. 32.0 32.1 32.2 Leshchenko, S. Secrets of Mezhyhirya. New luxury of Yanukovych. Ukrayinska Pravda. June 8, 2011. Accessed February 15, 2014
  33. Leshchenko, S. German building of Viktor Yanukovych. Ukrayinska Pravda. August 31, 2010. Accessed February 15, 2014
  34. 34.0 34.1 Leshchenko, S. Inside of Mezhyhirya. First photos of unheard luxury. Ukrayinska Pravda. April 6, 2012. Accessed February 15, 2014
  35. (Ukrainian) Yanukovych buried in Mezhyhirya first printed book in Ukraine and not only, Ukrayinska Pravda (25 February 2014)
  36. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links