There were several UAM development centers.
Kiev The first house built in
Kiev in the Ukrainian Art Nouveau style was the house of I. I. Shchitkivskyi at 4 Poltavska Street (1907–1908). This ordinary two-story house was made of wood and faced with brick, and had a flat façade with seven windows per floor. It was in Kiev that the first engineering structure in the UAM style was built — the building of the city sewage treatment plant in Saperna Slobidka (architect ). A
narodnyi dim in the village of was also built according to his design. The architecture of the Kiev center is characterized by a more developed rationalist direction of the UAM. The was built by the architect by order of the doctor . The building was destroyed as a result of shelling by Russian
Bolsheviks in 1918. File:Музейний пров 4 201910.jpg|4 Muzeinyi Lane, 1909 File:Паньківська вулиця 8 20191016.jpg|Residential building at 8 Pankivska Street, 1910 File:Академія муніципального управління, фасад будинку.JPG|Hrushevskyi College, 1911 File:Kyiv Forest University.JPG|
Forest Engineering Institute, 1927 File:Будинок прибутковий Паньківська вул. 8, вигляд із двору 02.JPG|Decorative figures on the back side of the building at 8 Pankivska Street File:Оздоблення в стилі українського модерну на комерційному училищі - Київ, пров. Бєлінського, 3 P1140257.JPG|Decorative elements on the building of Kyiv Commercial School
Poltava The first three buildings in the style of Ukrainian Art Nouveau were built near
Poltava. In 1903–1908, the first was built
Poltava Governorate Zemstvo Building, designed by the architect
Vasyl Krychevsky. In 1902–1906, the architect and artist I. S. Kuznetsov built the Intercession Church in the village of Plishyvets. In 1903–1905, the architects Yevhen Serdyuk and Mykola Stasyukov built the I. P. Kotliarevsky school in Poltava. In 1916, the was built by the design of Vasyl Krychevsky and ceramist . Also, UAM manifested itself in the project of zemstvo schools, implemented by
Opanas Slastion. Today, 53 schools are known to have remained on the territory of the former
Lokhvytsia Zemstvo (now parts of
Lubny Raion in
Poltava Oblast,
Romny Raion in
Sumy Oblast, and
Pryluky Raion in
Chernihiv Oblast). They are being studied by a public project with the same name . File:Покровська церква 1902-1907рр., с.Плішивець, Гадяцький р-н., Полтавська обл..jpg|Intercession Church in Plishyvets, 1907 File:Школа земська двокомплектна, село Гільці 04.jpg|Zemstvo school in Hiltsi File:Школа у вишиванці Ярошівка.jpg|The school in Yaroshivka File:Клуб Котлова (Кременчуг).jpg|
Kriukiv palace of culture,
Kremenchuk, 1927 File:Будинок Полтавського губернського земства P1230866.jpg|Decorative elements adorning the Poltava Zemstvo building File:Школа в вишиванці Брагінці.jpg|Fragment of the façade of the school in Brahyntsi File:Школа у вишиванці Брисі.jpg|Fragment of the façade of the school in
Zavodske File:Школа у вишиванці Остапівка.jpg|Fragment of the façade of the school in Ostapivka File:Школа у вишиванці Гаївщина.jpg|Fragment of the façade of the school in Haivshchyna
Kharkov The idea of creating a new Ukrainian architectural style originated among the residents of
Kharkov. This idea was first implemented by the Kharkov architect artist Vasyl Krychevsky in the building of the Poltava Governorate Zemstvo, and Kharkiv residents Serhiy Vasylkivsky, M. S. Samokysh and M. M. Uvarov painted its interior. In Kharkov, Yevhen Serdyuk and
Zdzisław Charmański built the first complex of buildings for scientific research purposes in the Ukrainian Art Nouveau style: the (1909–1911), which is now the Research Institute of Plant Breeding, Selection and Genetics. Different trends of the UAM existed in and around Kharkov. The Kharkov Center of the Ukrainian Art Nouveau made a significant contribution to the development of the style both in terms of the number of buildings and in its theoretical developments. File:«Селекційна станція»1913р., просп.Московський,142, м.Харків.JPG|Kharkiv Agricultural Selection Station, 1911 Pavlivska Square, 4 (Kharkiv) 2020 - 04.jpg|Piotrovsky's House in Kharkiv, 1912 File:Будинок Попова.Харків.jpg|Popov's Building, 1912 Художнє училище 1913р., вул. Червонопрапорна, 8, м.Харків.JPG|
Kharkiv Art School, 1913
Lviv Lviv architects produced local versions of the Ukrainian Art Nouveau, in which regional features preceded those coming from eastern Ukraine. At the same time, the desire of Lviv artists to at least partially pick up and develop some characteristic forms of the folk architecture of the
Dnieper region, in particular trapezoidal openings in portals and windows, is quite eloquent, although these themes in
Galicia never became as dominant as in Central and Eastern Ukraine. The most famous building in this style in Lviv is the building of the Dnister Insurance Company (20 Ruska Street), designed by architect
Ivan Levynskyi. File:Lviv Kotsubynskoho 21 RB.jpg|21 Kotsiubynskoho Street, 1905 File:Будинок української кредитної спілки «Дністер»2.jpg|Dnister Society building, 1906 File:Львів госпіталь прикордонних.JPG|Solecki Clinic, whose architecture used folk
Hutsul and
Zakopane motifs, 1908 File:Lviv Chuprynky 103 SAM 9045 46-101-1928.JPG|
Ukrainian National Forestry University, 1909
Yekaterinoslav in Dnipro Separate buildings in the UAM style were also built in Yekaterinoslav (now
Dnipro). The first such building is the house at 22 Kavaleriiska Street (1908), by design of I. M. Truba. This two-story building had several residential apartments. In the rural areas of the
Yekaterinoslav Governorate, one of the first houses built in folk-style architecture is the
Prosvita House in the village of (1909, designed by I. M. Truba). Among the early 20th century Yekaterinoslav houses, the most notable landmark that incorporated folk motifs was the
house of engineer V. M. Khrennikov. Khrennikov House immediately became one of the city's outstanding buildings; before it was even finished, in early 1913 it was included in the "City Landmarks" section of the book "All of Yekaterinoslav" (1913, p. 126).
Other regions of Ukraine • In
Odessa, the residential complex at 3 Pyrohivska Street was built in the UAM style (1911–1916, architect ). The six buildings of the complex form an ensemble, making this the first Ukrainian Noveau residential complex. • In
Uman, a gymnasium at 25 Malofontanna Street was built in the beginning of 20th century with characteristic features of Ukrainian Nouveau. • In
Tulchyn, a house by the architest M. I. Shpandel and engineer Hrozdovsky, built in 1927, at Mykola Leontovycha Street 51. • In
Chernihiv and Chernihiv Oblast, multiple houses, especially schools, were built in the UAM style. • In
Dunaivtsi, the Krasiński Palace was built in a similar style in the beginning of 20th century.
Kuban In
Kuban, most railway stations of the Kuban–Black Sea railway were built in the Ukrainian Nouveau style (, , , Titarovka, etc.), including numerous adjacent buildings, such as the workers' residential houses and schools (1910–1916). == Legacy ==