Lawmakers are proposing to lift restrictions on the construction of the Museum of the Revolution of Dignity
The Verkhovna Rada Committee on the Organization of State Power, Local Self-Government, Regional Development, and Urban Planning has recommended that parliament pass a law allowing for the resumption of construction of the National Memorial Complex to the Heroes of the Heavenly Hundred—the Museum of the Revolution of Dignity.
This was reported with reference to the press service of the Verkhovna Rada Secretariat.
Bill No. 14166 provides for the lifting of the ban on the placement of a ceremonial structure of national significance within the “red lines” of the Alley of the Heroes of the Heavenly Hundred in Kyiv (the street boundaries separating the roadway from the built-up area).
If the law is adopted, the relevant restrictions will not apply to the placement of objects within the memorial and museum complex.
The law will also allow for the removal of certain legislative restrictions on the construction of the museum near urban planning and architectural monuments for which the boundaries of protection zones have not yet been defined. Planning restrictions and land use regulations within cultural heritage protection zones will also not apply during the design and construction of the museum.
When issuing urban planning conditions and restrictions for the museum’s design, its maximum permissible height will be determined based on the parameters specified in the winning design of the open international architectural competition.
It is noted that representatives of the Ministry of Community and Territorial Development and the Ministry of Culture supported the bill in its proposed version.
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