St. Nicholas Roman Catholic Church, Kyiv

Today the building is shared between the Catholic Church and the National Organ and Chamber Music Hall of Ukraine.

[3] A design competition held in 1898 selected Stanisław Wołowski, whose entry was a Gothic type construction with two 60 m (197 ft) towers.

To increase the stability of the construction on the uneven Kyiv ground, it was ensured by bore-and-stuffed piles, a newly introduced invention of Anton Strauss.

A Gothic style three-story house was built for the parish clergy to the left of the church.

[5] After its restoration in 1979-1980, commissioned by the Rada of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR, by the architects O. Grauzhis and I. Tukalevskiy, the church was turned into the National House of Organ and Chamber Music of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Національний будинок органної та камерної музики України; translit.

For the reconstruction and restoration of the severely damaged church, the building's stained glass windows were manufactured in the Baltics, its furniture was created in Lviv, and the high-quality wood floors were produced in the Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast.

[1] The Kyiv city municipality refuse to hand over the building until the issue of transferring the House of Organ Music will be solved.

Vintage postcard depicting the church with its two 60 m (197 ft) towers
Modern view