International partners will help repair three damaged high-rise buildings in the village of Pervomaiske before winter

A damaged house in Pervomaiskyi. Screenshot from the video A damaged house in Pervomaiske. Screenshot from the video NikVesti

In the village of Pervomaiske, Mykolaiv Oblast, they are in a hurry to repair three high-rise buildings damaged by Russian shelling before winter. International partners help to repair housing.

This is stated in the story of the Rada TV channel.

It is noted that the locals have been waiting for the repairs of their houses for more than two years, all this time they have been struggling with moisture and trying to save their apartments somehow. Because of the complex damage to the ceiling panels in the houses, people were unable to get volunteer help for repairs. Currently, donors have been found and houses are being repaired.

«Donors were a Polish humanitarian organization and the government of Taiwan. With their help, we implemented such a project. I think that it will have a continuation in the form of repairs of entrances and repairs of apartments,» said the first deputy head of the Pervomaiske settlement military administration Valerii Lishchuk.

In total, almost 3,400 objects were destroyed in the Pervomaiske community, most of them residential buildings. So far, it has been possible to restore approximately half of the damaged housing of the locals.

High-rise buildings are being repaired in Pervomaisk. Screenshot from the video High-rise buildings are being repaired in Pervomaisk. Screenshot from the video
High-rise buildings are being repaired in Pervomaisk. Screenshot from the video High-rise buildings are being repaired in Pervomaisk. Screenshot from the video

We will remind that the village of Pervomaiske, 40 kilometers from Mykolaiv, was near the front from March to November 10, 2022. As a result of strikes by the Russian army, private houses, high-rise buildings, a lyceum, a cultural center and a kindergarten were destroyed and damaged here.

NikVesti found out what life is like today in war-torn Pervomaiske and whether anything has changed in the year and a half since the departure of the Russian occupying forces.

View full version