Many of Ukraine’s historic monuments have been destroyed in the three months since Russia invaded, but cultural experts are working to conserve their memory using cutting-edge technology and 3D scans.
One of them is volunteer French engineer Emmanuel Durand, a specialist in 3D data acquisition, who is assisting a bevy of architects, engineers, historic building experts and a museum director to record buildings in Kyiv, Lviv, Chernigiv and Kharkiv.
Durand steps over a jumbled pile of beams and crunches over the rubble that was once Kharkiv’s 19th-century fire station.
Photo: AFP
He plants his laser scanner, a sort of tripod with a pivoting head, in a strategic corner of the severely damaged building.
The redbrick fire station and its watchtower, built in 1887, are a monument to Kharkiv’s industrial revolution.
Durand’s gadget records the building from all angles.
“The scanner records 500,000 points per second. We’ll get 10 million points from this location. Then we’ll change location and go round the whole building, outside and inside. A billion points in all,” he said.
At the end of the day, Durand assembles all the data on a computer “like the pieces of a jigsaw” to digitally reconstruct the building. The result is a perfect reproduction, accurate to within 5mm that can be rotated in any direction or sliced into sections. One can even see the holes where blast waves from explosions have damaged the structure.
“This enables us to map out the building for the future. That could help us work out if anything has moved, which is important for safety purposes, and see what can be restored and what can’t. It’s also useful from a historical point of view,” he said.
“We’ve got the actual missile-damaged building and an exact replica of how it used to look,” he said.
In Kharkiv alone, about 500 buildings are listed as being of historic architectural significance. Most are in the dense historic city center, on which Russian airstrikes are concentrated, said architect Kateryna Kuplytska, a member of the body documenting damaged heritage sites.
She estimated that more than 100 of them have already been hit.
While Russian troops have loosened their noose around Ukraine’s second city, shells still rain down with regular monotony.
New explosions and blast waves, inclement weather, construction work and site visits will all contribute to hastening the destruction of these already weakened buildings, Kuplytska said.
“That’s why it’s essential to record them in accurate detail so we can plan urgent interventions that will stabilize the structures” and preserve their memory, she said.
“Recording the destruction will also assist in criminal proceedings. We see serious damage to heritage across the whole country. It’s genocide towards Ukrainian people and genocide towards Ukrainian culture,” she said.
After two days at the fire station, Durand moves on to the economics faculty at Karazin National University in Kharkiv. It is located right next to the imposing headquarters of the Ukrainian secret services, which is being targeted by the Russians and has been hit on numerous occasions. The current iteration of the economics faculty was built in Soviet times. It was designed by Serhiy Tymoshenko, the father of the “modern Ukrainian” style of architecture of the early 20th century, and is one of the country’s first reinforced concrete structures.
Some critics suggest it is futile to document historic buildings in such meticulous detail while the war is still raging and people are dying every day.
However, Tetyana Pylyptshuk, director of the Kharkiv literary museum, begged to disagree.
“Culture is the basis of everything. If culture had developed well, people probably wouldn’t be dying and there wouldn’t be a war,” she said.
Pylyptshuk, who also sits on the commission on damaged historical sites, has sent most of her museum collections to western Ukraine to protect them from damage — and from looting, should Russian troops overrun Kharkiv.
“Today, everyone realizes this. Maybe they were not so attentive to our cultural heritage before ... but when you lose it, it hurts,” she said.
AFGHAN CHILD: A court battle is ongoing over if the toddler can stay with Joshua Mast and his wife, who wanted ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness’ for her Major Joshua Mast, a US Marine whose adoption of an Afghan war orphan has spurred a years-long legal battle, is to remain on active duty after a three-member panel of Marines on Tuesday found that while he acted in a way unbecoming of an officer to bring home the baby girl, it did not warrant his separation from the military. Lawyers for the Marine Corps argued that Mast abused his position, disregarded orders of his superiors, mishandled classified information and improperly used a government computer in his fight over the child who was found orphaned on the battlefield in rural Afghanistan
STICKING TO DEFENSE: Despite the screening of videos in which they appeared, one of the defendants said they had no memory of the event A court trying a Frenchman charged with drugging his wife and enlisting dozens of strangers to rape her screened videos of the abuse to the public on Friday, to challenge several codefendants who denied knowing she was unconscious during their actions. The judge in the southern city of Avignon had nine videos and several photographs of the abuse of Gisele Pelicot shown in the courtroom and an adjoining public chamber, involving seven of the 50 men accused alongside her husband. Present in the courtroom herself, Gisele Pelicot looked at her telephone during the hour and a half of screenings, while her ex-husband
NEW STORM: investigators dubbed the attacks on US telecoms ‘Salt Typhoon,’ after authorities earlier this year disrupted China’s ‘Flax Typhoon’ hacking group Chinese hackers accessed the networks of US broadband providers and obtained information from systems that the federal government uses for court-authorized wiretapping, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on Saturday. The networks of Verizon Communications, AT&T and Lumen Technologies, along with other telecoms, were breached by the recently discovered intrusion, the newspaper said, citing people familiar with the matter. The hackers might have held access for months to network infrastructure used by the companies to cooperate with court-authorized US requests for communications data, the report said. The hackers had also accessed other tranches of Internet traffic, it said. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs
EYEING THE US ELECTION: Analysts say that Pyongyang would likely leverage its enlarged nuclear arsenal for concessions after a new US administration is inaugurated North Korean leader Kim Jong-un warned again that he could use nuclear weapons in potential conflicts with South Korea and the US, as he accused them of provoking North Korea and raising animosities on the Korean Peninsula, state media reported yesterday. Kim has issued threats to use nuclear weapons pre-emptively numerous times, but his latest warning came as experts said that North Korea could ramp up hostilities ahead of next month’s US presidential election. In a Monday speech at a university named after him, the Kim Jong-un National Defense University, he said that North Korea “will without hesitation use all its attack