Building on Lista St, 1
A three-storey residential building. Located on the corner of Lista and Voronogo streets.
Lviv. Architecture of Modernism
A three-storey residential building. Located on the corner of Lista and Voronogo streets.
A three-story residential building, designed as a revenue house. It is skillfully placed in a hilly landscape: located on a rise, the facade is divided in half by an almost imperceptible bend.
The three-story revenue house is located on the corner of Heroyiv Maidanu and Hlinky streets. It is moved back from the red building line. A front garden with a fence is planned around the building.
A four-story residential building, situated in the upper part of Kalicha Hora St. It was constructed as a revenue house in late 1930s in functionalism style. The house is an architectural landmark of local importance No. 2135.
A residential building on Ulasa Samchuka St, 3 was, probably, aimed as a dwelling for one or two families.
A residential building on Siayvo St, 16, in Levandivka district, could have been constructed as a revenue house.
A three-story residential building, designed as a revenue house. It is located at 3 Rossi St in the neighborhood of Tsetnerivka (side street of Lychakivska St).
A residential building on the corner of І. Ivana Franka St, 148, and Ulasa Samchuka St. It is an architectural landmark of local importance No. 760.
Between Chuprynky and Politekhnichna streets there is a complex of residential buildings for the lower middle class. The complex was designed by one of the most well-known and outstanding architects of Lviv functionalism – Ferdynand Kassler.
It was designed as a revenue apartment building, built in refined functionalist shapes, on the corner of Zelena and Konopnytskoyi streets.
Apartment buildings for medium and upper classes. They have been constructed as revenue houses for Polish and Jewish investors.
An apartment building raised in exemplary functionalist shapes. The house is moved back from the red building line and has a front lawn.
When it comes to preserving architecture, the focus is often on the facades and entrance halls that fall under general city laws regarding heritage. Flat interiors often are not protected since they are private spaces, and their preservation relies on the goodwill of their owners.
The modernist apartment blocks of the 1920s and 1930s must have looked incredible to city dwellers of that time, with their beautiful wavy shapes, shiny facades, porthole windows, and fancy walls concealing the latest innovations in household appliances.
Our research and documentation project on interwar modernist architecture, “Lviv. Modernist Architecture,” is beginning a collaboration with the ZMIN Foundation.