Pavlo Fedykovych
A new city: After the Chernobyl disaster of April 1986, some 45,000 people were left homeless. The Soviet Union created a new city for many of them -- Slavutych.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Nuclear workers: Slavutych was needed to house workers for the three Chernobyl nuclear reactors that continued to operate for several years after the explosion. The plant was eventually closed in December 2000.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Place on the map: Khrystyna Belchenko, who works in Slavutych's museum says there were three criteria for building the new city: "A distance of no more than 50 kilometers from Chernobyl power plant, the existing railway tracks and the unpolluted territory."
Pavlo Fedykovych
Fast work: It took just two years to construct Slavutych. "The city is often called the last monument to the Soviet Union," says Belchenko.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Hasty departure: Those evacuated from Pripyat, the city near Chernobyl, were told they would be able to return after a few days. But no one came back to live there. These abandoned possessions are on display in the Slavutych museum.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Lost youth: Tatyana Kuznetsova, right, was 11 years old when she was evacuated from Pripyat, settling in Slavutych two years later. She says the Chernobyl disaster robbed her of her part of her childhood.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Tragic reminder: Those who moved to Slavutych still live in the shadow of the Chernobyl tragedy. This monument to the those who died in the blast and its immediate aftermath is the scene of regular vigils for those who perished.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Helping hands: This monument in Slavutych namechecks the capitals of the Soviet nations that came together to build the city. Different countries were tasked with building the city's different neighborhoods.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Architectural kaleidoscope: The majority of building designs were borrowed from other Soviet cities because of the lack of time to create something new. This building has traditional Georgian motifs.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Azerbaijan artwork: A Soviet mosaic panel in Bakinsky quarter of Slavutych -- Azerbaijan's contribution to the city.
Pavlo Fedykovych
High standards: When it opened in its doors in 1988, Slavutych had one of the highest standards of living in the Soviet Union.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Difficult journey: Making the transition to Slavutych wasn't easy for many evacuees./ "During the first year [of living here] I hated Slavutych and wanted to leave it as quick as possible," says Tatyana Kuznetsova.
Pavlo Fedykovych
Tough times: The collapse of the Soviet Union, political turmoil in Ukraine and the closure of Chernobyl -- the main workplace of most of Slavutych's population -- has been hard on the city.
Pavlo Fedykovych
A new beginning: Today, Slavutych seems to be renewing itself. Tetyana Boyko, the head of the department of information in the city council, says the city struggled at first to find its feet, but is now striving to become an open-minded center for innovation and artistic creativity.
Pavlo Fedykovych
City of ideas: "Slavutych is a city of new ideas," says Boyko. "I like our brand very much." The city now hosts several annual art events, among them an international festival of film and urbanism poignantly named "86."