In April 2011, the USC SNB bought a 4,77-hectares plot of land just five kilometres away from the city of Kaluga, on the left bank of the river Kaluzhka, located in the village of Krasotinka, with the purpose of building a temple.
In 2014, the USC SNB was officially registered by the government of Russia as an interregional organisation for the development of Slavic culture.
[7] On 22 June 2015, the day of summer solstice, the Temple of the Fire of Svarozich (Храм Огня Сварожича) was officially opened in the village of Krasotinka.
The original Obninsk and Moscow communities left the USC SNB in 2002, on the occasion of the Bittsa Accord,[8] establishing the Circle of Pagan Tradition (CPT).
[3] In 2012 the same three organisations signed an "Agreement on Mutual Recognition of Priests", which defined common criteria for the ordination of Slavic Native Faith's priesthood.