The plan to build a temple in Ukraine were announced by the church on 20 July 1998. The announcement was unique in that it came eight years after
missionaries entered the country, and was the first temple outside the United States to be dedicated within twenty years of the church entering the country. However, the project was delayed for nine years as the church had difficulty obtaining the three to four
hectares of land it wanted for the project. On 23 June 2007, ground was broken for the project by Paul B. Pieper, a
general authority who was first counselor in the presidency of the church's Europe East
Area. After construction was complete, a two-week public open house was held from 7–21 August 2010. The temple was dedicated on 29 August 2010 by
church president Thomas S. Monson. On September 12, 2011, the Ukrainian Ministry of Regional Development, Construction, Housing and Communal Services awarded the Kyiv Ukraine Temple first place for the best religious building constructed in Ukraine in 2010. In 2020, like all others in the church, the Kyiv Ukraine Temple was closed in response to the
COVID-19 pandemic. In February 2022, the temple was closed due to
Russia's invasion of Ukraine but reopened later in the year, on October 16. == Design and architecture ==