
The nearby Trukhaniv Island offers more recreation, with bars, restaurants, beaches and concert venues - frequented by some of the country’s most cutting-edge performers-and showcases memorable views of the charming Podil neighborhood. The mighty Dnipro lapping at their feet connects over two dozen Ukrainian cities to the Black Sea, provides drinking water and hydroelectricity to many of their fellow citizens and forms an indelible part of the country’s heritage, glorified by national poet Taras Shevchenko as the symbol of Ukraine’s fate. On a hot day they might first get off at Hidropark, a metro station on an island, to relax at one of its beaches. Kyiv’s cheap and efficient subway makes it easy for left bank denizens to make their way across the river to the heart of their capital. Big shopping malls provide plenty of opportunities for entertainment, and no geopolitical crisis, contentious election or looming threat of Russian invasion have stood in the way of new investments: construction cranes are everywhere. But new, even larger residential towers have sprung up over the last decade.


With its cheaper real estate, thanks in part to an undiminished stock of towering Soviet-era apartment buildings, the left bank is home to many of 2023 Honorary World’s Best City Kyiv’s families. The Dnipro, one of Europe’s largest rivers, divides Ukraine’s capital into two different worlds: the right bank-with its historical center, administrative buildings, cafés and restaurants-and the residential left bank.
