At the beginning of the Second World War, Buchach had 11,100 inhabitants, of whom 2,400 were Ukrainians, 3,550 Poles, and 5,150 Jews. In 1959, Buchach had 7,000 inhabitants. Such a sharp decrease in the population of the city is explained by the Nazi genocide against the Jews, the deportation of Poles to the territory of Poland and the losses of Ukrainians in the struggle against the Stalinist regime. Today, the population of the city is 12,600, the area of the city is 1,026 hectares.
The underground glory of the salt mine with its unique halls and objects.
Salt panel "Good Shubin". This panel is a kind of miner's talisman. The miners consider Shubin, depicted here, to be their assistant and protector.
The building of the "Bakhmut-1" railway station, formerly "Artemivsk-1" built in 1878. Location for technical library for railwaymen. Damaged by shelling of Russian Army in September 2022.
The Church of the Nativity of the Virgin is located in the village of Peremoha in the Kyiv region. It was built in the 19th century and its wooden exterior had survived without any major changes until 2022, when Russian artillery shelling damaged the facades, doors, windows and interior.
This hospital was built at the soda factory and located in the "Belgian heritage," the conventional name of a residential quarter in Lysychansk, which consisted of residential and public buildings erected at the end of the 19th - beginning of the 20th century for the servants and workers.