The exhibition aims to encourage an exchange of experience regarding how conceptual and technological considerations from Switzerland, together with concrete measures on the ground, can play a part in preserving and repairing settlements and facilities in Ukraine. This is something that ETH Professors Matthias Kohler and Brian Adey, as well as Christiaanse and Wieser, all agreed on at the exhibition’s opening. Accordingly, the exhibition’s five-member curatorial team was also drawn from a mix of backgrounds: Basil Roth and Jonathan Banz were joined by architect Gyler Mydyti and Adam Przywara from Swiss Network with Ukraine, as well as Ukrainian Anastasiya Ponomaryova, who until recently worked in Philip Ursprung’s History and Theory of Architecture group.
Cleaning up contaminated soil, protecting a maternity clinic
One area in which local and international initiatives are in demand is agriculture. No wonder, considering that over 4,700 square kilometres of farmland are estimated to have been contaminated. At the exhibition, environmental scientist Vira Ohorodnyk, ecologist Olena Melnyk and agricultural economist Maryna Nehrey demonstrate the ecological and political steps that can be taken to restore farmland and revitalise agricultural areas. All three fled Ukraine and are currently working at ETH.
Melnyk analysed 89 bomb craters to determine the extent to which the bombing had contaminated arable soil with heavy metals and environmental toxins. Her findings are now being taken up: at the Bern University of Applied Sciences, as part of its external page CAS Rebuild Ukraine, a group of Ukrainians is developing a strategies for how to decontaminate the soil and cultivate it in a way that safeguards people’s health, as Yevgen Getman, a member of the project, explains to ETH News. Another Ukrainian CAS participant, Kateryna Vynogradova, describes how the maternity clinic in Dnipro is being structurally reinforced so that the operating theatre and emergency department are protected in the event of bombing.
The economist Iryna Doronina, who is a senior researcher at the ETH Institute for Science, Technology and Policy ISPT, analyses the impact of the war on Ukraine's energy system. She has investigated that over 255 missiles have hit the energy infrastructure during the first year of the war, damaging around 70 per cent of energy units and 50 per cent of the transmission grid either completely or temporarily. As a result, entire regions, including the capital, experienced systemic blackouts with power outages lasting up to 8 hours per day. According to Doronina's research, Russia's attack took place at the very moment when the Ukrainian power grid was able to operate independently of neighbouring grids and Ukraine was in a position to supply the country with electricity on its own. She is also investigating the potential of renewable green energies for a future low-carbon, community-decentralised and conflict-resilient electricity infrastructure in the Ukraine.
From emergency accommodation to easy-to-build homes
Several initiatives focus on housing, as the war has already destroyed well over 150,000 residential buildings and around 12 million Ukrainians have had to leave their homes. Swiss window and fa?ade maker Martin Huber has developed an initiative for easy-to-build timber houses. He was already running a company in Ukraine before the war. Now he has led a team in Switzerland to develop a small three-part house made of wood, comprising a bathroom/kitchen, parlour and bedrooms for four people. So far 89 of these homes have been built in Ukraine. The house’s good insulation means occupants can cope with periods when the electricity or heating fails. As Mydyti, architect and one of the exhibition’s curators, explains, members of Swiss Network with Ukraine are now working together to further develop this approach and transfer it to larger apartment blocks using digital fabrication methods.
Practical reuse of building materials
In the exhibition, the model of the wooden house stands right next to a repaired wooden door and a wooden bed frame. These exhibits come from the Ukrainian project CO-HATY (which can be translated either as “to love” or as “house collaboration”). They show how Ukrainians are reusing various building materials for residential buildings. external page CO-HATY is run by the Ukrainian NGO Metalab, to which the Ukrainian architect and exhibition curator Ponomaryova also belongs. In western Ukraine, Metalab has converted six former Soviet municipal buildings into emergency accommodation for around 1,300 refugees. It is now developing further approaches to alleviate the housing shortage over the long term. For Mydyti, CO-HATY is a good example of how construction professionals in Switzerland can also learn from Ukrainian approaches to reusing building materials.
With an eye to this kind of reuse, Switzerland’s external page Re-Win association is collecting windows for Ukraine – for example, the windows of the Huber pavilions that were demolished on the ETH H?nggerberg campus are being reused in Ukraine with the involvement of Catherine de Wolf’s Chair of Circular Engineering for Architecture.