Usava was born on 6 September 1921 in
Irkutsk, Russia. When she was nine, her family moved to
Moscow where she attended high school and then entered the
Moscow Institute of Architecture. In 1941, the school was changed into a processing facility for the war. Students were required to package and prepare demolition bombs for use against German tanks. Simultaneously, Usava enrolled in nursing courses to be able to assist with helping the war wounded. In October 1942, a decision was made to evacuate the students to
Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Students were allowed only what they could carry, no excesses, and traveled in freight cars, while the instructors were in the passenger section of the transport trains. It took over a month for the students to reach the Tashkent Institute, where they slept underneath the desks at which they studied during the day. Four days a week they were required to study architecture and the other three days a week they worked in a
munitions factory. Within two days of arrival, Usava became employed in the workshop Yuri Yegorov, which later became the
Minsk Project Institute and set about with other architects to restore the city of Minsk. She most often worked with
Alexander Voinov () and together, they worked on such projects as the Minsk Youth Theatre, the Palace of Pioneers and the building of the regional committee of the PBC (now Minsk
Commonwealth of Independent States Executive Secretariat building). She also worked with L. Ryminskim to restore the buildings of the
Belarusian Polytechnic Institute. Both alone and in collaborative projects Usava built many houses, schools and kindergartens. She participated in the creation of Victory Park at the
National Opera and Ballet of Belarus and she designed the reconstruction of
Maksim Gorky Central Children's Park. In the 1970s, as part of a citywide effort to solve the flooding issues of the city, she worked on the and the both on the
Svislach River, the largest reservoir in Belarus known as the , and the water/green space plan for the outskirts of Minsk. In 1989, Usava was inducted into the Minsk Project Institute's Book of Honor and she retired in 1990 after 43 years of service. == References ==