Home>“During war, architecture becomes an object of international politics”
28.06.2022
“During war, architecture becomes an object of international politics”
How to protect a country’s architectural heritage when war rages? From Palmyra to Timbuktu, the question has tragically been raised many times – and it arises again in the context of Russia’s war in Ukraine. As the conflict enters its fourth month, the Paris School of International Affairs (PSIA) and the Urban School of Sciences Po co-hosted a discussion on Thursday 23 June, with leading Ukrainian architect and scholar, and co-founder of the Urban Forms Center in Kharkiv, Ievgeniia Gubkina, and the Director of the Culture and Emergencies entity at UNESCO, Krista Pikkat.
Since the Euro Maidan revolution in 2014, Ukraine has become a beacon for grass-roots experiments in Soviet heritage conservation. A nation-wide discussion emerged about architecture as a vehicle for debating conflicting memories, nationhood, citizenship, corruption and new art forms. Modernist buildings became popular places for both domestic and international artists to create, for local counterculture to flourish, and for grass-roots democratisation and Europeanisation to advance.
Heritage as a target of war
But Ukrainian culture has been one of the targets of Vladimir Putin since 2014, highlighted PSIA Dean Arancha Gonzalez in her introduction of the conference. Despite international law in place to protect this heritage, it is targeted directly with the intention to undermine identities and to destroy the civilization behind it.
“Each fourth building in Kharkiv is totally demolished,” Ievgeniia Gubkina explained. The 1.4 million people city, where Gubkina lives and co-founded the NGO Urban Forms Center, is every day under shelling and bombing, and the damage is almost incomprehensible: “For years I researched Soviet modernism. I wrote a book about Kharkiv architecture and sent it to my publisher months before the war started,” she said: “one-fourth of all the objects included in my book are demolished now”.
"The war became the main link between architecture and human suffering”
Paradoxically, it is sometimes through war that people start to understand buildings and architecture as part of their heritage.