Luhansk Cathedral Mosque

The Cathedral Mosque in Luhansk was built between 2007 and 2010. The mosque was built according to the design of one of the existing mosques in Crimea. It is a three-storey building with a total area of 550 square metres. The construction of the mosque was sponsored by Kuwait. The construction and completion work was undertaken by the local Muslim community.

About this building

Key Features

  • Architecture

Visitors information

  • Car park at the building

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/Rokun Illia

Transfiguration Cathedral

The Transfiguration Cathedral is an Orthodox cathedral built in 1883-86. The cathedral was built according to one of Konstantin Thon's designs. In 1930, all the bells of the church were requisitioned and the bell tower was destroyed. A year later, the Stalinist authorities ordered the destruction of the cathedral, which was dynamited for building materials. After Ukraine's independence, it was impossible to rebuild the church on its original site, as new buildings had already been erected there during the Soviet period. On 9 August 1991, the municipal authorities made part of Gorky Square available for the construction of the cathedral.

Wikimedia Commons/Валерий Дед

Ahat Jami Mosque

Akhat-Jami is a mosque-cathedral in Donetsk, built between 1994 and 1999. It is named after Akhat Hafizovych Bragin, an entrepreneur and former president of the Shakhtar Donetsk football club, who died in a bomb attack in 1995. The building was originally intended to have only one minaret, but funding from Rinat Akhmetov enabled a second one to be built, which was eventually named after him.