Prison castle

All that remains of Kharkiv’s 200-year-old prison castle is a pair of buildings tucked away in a park at the intersection of Zbroiarska, and Slov’yans’ka Blagovischenska Streets.

Photo: Ivan Ponomarenko, 2021

The prison was built in 1822–1823 based on a design by the court architect Louis Charlemagne-Bode and was demolished in the mid-1960s.

A photograph from the early 20th century

The most interesting feature is the imposing three-story building, which appears to be about the same age as the castle.

Photo: Ivan Ponomarenko, 2021

Its cornices visually resemble those on the castle’s towers, which no longer exist, as seen in old photographs.

Photo: Ivan Ponomarenko, 2021

According to some reports, after the prison was closed, the building housed industrial facilities.

Photo: Ivan Ponomarenko, 2021

The building is now abandoned.

Photo: Ivan Ponomarenko, 2021

From 1893 to 1903, the prison “fortress” served as a transit prison through which convicts were sent to Sakhalin Island. After 1917, it became a prison run by the OGPU-NKVD. During the German occupation in World War II, the site housed the Stalag 364 concentration camp, where approximately 30,000 people perished.

Photo: Ivan Ponomarenko, 2021