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Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
Not the easiest place to find but memorable when you do get there. There was a really helpful, informative English speaking guide available when I arrived and she showed us around the prison. She supplied the historical background to give context to the building and the grimness of its history. A must visit place if you have any interest in Ukrainian history.
Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
Just a few logistics – If you don’t speak Ukrainian, please contact the museum via their Facebook page for an English language tour. The tour is free and will help you understand better the enormity of what you are seeing. The museum is suitable for young children and they should visit, but you will have to sensor one room. Finally, although a huge amount of the building is on Bandera street the actual entrance is on Karl Bruillov street The museum is moving, disturbing and absolutely essential. It brings to life the horrors of the individuals and the collective experienced both in this place and wider region. You will see where and what happened to political prisoners between arrest and being sentencing and upstairs there are individual accounts. One of the most important aspects of the museum is that it is based entirely on documented facts. The musuem makes clear that personal memoirs are subjective and subject to change over time and the museum makes it clear when something if based on a memoir. If you visit only one place when you’re in L’viv make it this museum.
Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
I'd recommend English-speaking visitors to call ahead to the museum and book an English-language tour of the ground floor: it is free and is really helpful. I was keen to check the suitability of the museum for children aged 10 and 11 and had a very helpful conversation via the museum's facebook site. The guide sought to engage the children, and skipped over the content inappropriate for them, but they found the stories of individuals upstairs most fascinating. Both my husband and I found the museum moving and disturbing, and brought to life the experiences we perhaps had not thought about before -- what happened to political prisoners between arrest and being sentanced. It is grim, but is also a story about human resiliance. An essential component of a visit to L'viv we think. The entrance is a little hard to find: it is not on Bandera street (as the address indicates), but round the corner on Karl Bruillov streee.
Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
Well worth a visit if you are interested in recent historical events. Not dissimilar to the KGB prison in Vilnius. Free to enter, self guided. You’ll need a guided tour if you want to go otherwise than the main prison floor.
Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
After Ukraine's independence, the country decided to preserve this prison as a reminder of the suffering of Lviv during occupations by Poland, the Nazis, and the Soviet Union. The cells and offices are preserved and exhibits cover the bloody history of the place. This visit will take you maybe an hour to go through the two open floors, and it is well worth a visit.
Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
The history of this prison is horrifying, but it's a must see. You can see the cells and you can still experience the smell of the toilets... Here a lot of horror took place. Most of the information is in Ukranian, so please take the information leaflets in English at the entrance to understand more.
Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
This is a free museum housed in the old prison building - this was used as a prison until the 1996 and they still have the original fittings such as doors/sinks which makes it a very unusual find. The exhibition is largely in Ukrainian although there is an English booklet which gives you the information about key events of the prison’s history. Many of the artefacts are very chilling and relate to devastating events including a huge massacre in the 1940s.
Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
Ce lieu gardé intact depuis le départ des soviétique fut tour à tour une prison utilé par les polonais, les soviétiques et l'occupant allemand. On peut aussi voir à l'étage une exposition relatant en photos les événements de 2014 ainsi que des témoignages de la présence soviétique à Lviv avec les horreur du stalinisme.Le musée est gratuit, on peut s'y rendre en tram depuis le Rynok.




Address: Lviv, Stepan Bandera street, 1
This museum is incredibly interesting and moving - the Russians have repeatedly tried to shut it down due to the content of exhibits and you must go and see the atrocities the USSR committed! The museum is free so no excuse! It used to be a prison (exhibits are in cells) and it goes through the mass execution of 1600 prisoners in the prison by the USSR. Displays are in Ukrainian but there are English translations. It took us an hour, taking our time reading all the boards. Note it closes for lunch 1-2pm.



