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Embassy of Germany, Kyiv

Diplomatic missions in KyivDiplomatic missions of GermanyGermany–Ukraine relations
Embassy of Germany in Kyiv 2017
Embassy of Germany in Kyiv 2017

The Embassy of Germany in Kyiv is Germany's diplomatic mission to Ukraine. The Federal Republic of Germany has since 1989 been officially represented in Ukraine, first by the Consulate General in Kyiv, since January 1992, after the Ukrainian independence in 1991, with a diplomatic mission. Since March 2000, an honorary consul in Lviv also represents the interests of the Federal Republic of Germany. In July 2008, another honorary consul was appointed in Odessa, followed by an additional consulate general in Donetsk since the summer of 2009.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Embassy of Germany, Kyiv (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Embassy of Germany, Kyiv
Bohdana Khmelnytskoho Street, Kyiv Центр

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Wikipedia: Embassy of Germany, KyivContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.446111111111 ° E 30.511111111111 °
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Address

Посольство Німеччини

Bohdana Khmelnytskoho Street 25
01030 Kyiv, Центр
Ukraine
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Phone number

call+380442166794

Website
kiew.diplo.de

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Embassy of Germany in Kyiv 2017
Embassy of Germany in Kyiv 2017
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Nearby Places

Zoloti Vorota (Kyiv Metro)
Zoloti Vorota (Kyiv Metro)

Zoloti Vorota (Ukrainian: Золоті́ воро́та, (listen)) is a station on the Kyiv Metro system that serves Kyiv, the capital city of Ukraine. The station was opened as part of the first segment of the Syretsko-Pecherska Line on 31 December 1989. It serves as a transfer station to the Teatralna station of the Sviatoshynsko-Brovarska Line. It is located near the city's Golden Gate, from which the station takes its name. The original design plans for the station called for a clean utilitarian structure typical of metro stations of that period. Due to the efforts of the city's chief architect Mykola Zharikov, the design was scrapped in favor of one that resembles an ancient Kievan Rus' temple by Borys Zhezherin, Vadym Zhezherin, and Zharikov himself. Such a design was a particularly risky feat, since Ukraine was a part of the secular Soviet Union at the time of the station's construction. Vadym Zhezherin and Mykola Zharikov, among the other artists and architects of the station, were bestowed the State Prize of Ukraine in the Field of Architecture for their work in 1991.The Zoloti Vorota features 80 distinct mosaic pieces and images depicting the history of Kievan Rus'. In 2011, the station's mosaics were listed as "newly discovered objects of cultural heritage" by the city's Department of Cultural Heritage. The station is regarded as one of the most impressive metro stations in Europe, being placed on a list compiled by The Daily Telegraph in 2013.