Kyiv city authorities are dismantling thousands [1] of illegal kiosks across the city to clear public spaces and advance decommunization efforts.
This initiative represents a significant shift in the urban landscape of the Ukrainian capital. By removing these small architectural forms, known as MAFs, the city aims to reclaim pedestrian areas and eliminate structures that do not comply with current zoning laws.
The campaign focuses on the removal of thousands [1] of these illegal kiosks. City officials said the effort is tied to a broader decommunization strategy designed to remove vestiges of the previous era from the city's physical environment.
Beyond the goal of urban beautification, the process has a practical military application. Some of the dismantled structures are being transported to the front lines to be repurposed as bunkers [1]. This allows the city to turn illegal urban clutter into defensive fortifications for soldiers in the field.
City authorities said the removal of these kiosks is necessary to improve the overall quality of public spaces. The process involves identifying structures without proper permits, and coordinating their swift removal from the streets of Kyiv [1].
“Kyiv city authorities are dismantling thousands of illegal kiosks”
This operation demonstrates a dual-purpose administrative strategy where urban renewal is linked to national security. By repurposing illegal civilian structures into military fortifications, Kyiv is optimizing available materials for the war effort while simultaneously executing a political and aesthetic overhaul of the city's public image.

