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The back-up supply in Biletsky’s block meant the lift — unlike in many places — was still shuttling up and down
In her building in central Kyiv, Tetyana Chernyshenko is another who has been encouraging her neighbours to club together for a generator
Tetyana Kolisnichenko, in her Soviet-era block, has been filling plastic bottles with hot water to keep warm
Chernyshenko’s family opted for solar panels to fight blackouts
More than 1,000 of Kyiv’s 12,000 high-rise residential buildings have been without heating for the past month
Joint effort had brought Biletsky’s building closer together in the face of the unrelenting Russian attacks
The back-up supply in Biletsky’s block meant the lift — unlike in many places — was still shuttling up and down
In her building in central Kyiv, Tetyana Chernyshenko is another who has been encouraging her neighbours to club together for a generator
Tetyana Kolisnichenko, in her Soviet-era block, has been filling plastic bottles with hot water to keep warm
Chernyshenko’s family opted for solar panels to fight blackouts
More than 1,000 of Kyiv’s 12,000 high-rise residential buildings have been without heating for the past month
Joint effort had brought Biletsky’s building closer together in the face of the unrelenting Russian attacks
When Russian strikes cut off the power, heating and water to swathes of the Ukrainian capital in -20C temperatures, Denys Biletsky was prepared.
Following a round of particularly intense Russian barrages two years earlier, Biletsky had convinced his neighbours to chip in together to install solar panels and batteries on the roof of their high-rise apartment block.
As Ukraine accuses Russia of trying to freeze the population into submission with its most intense attacks on the energy network of the entire war, more and more people in Kyiv are fundraising and pooling cash to buy alternative sources of shared electricity.
“Without backup power, our building simply wouldn’t be able to function,” Biletsky, the 42-year-old head of his building’s homeowners’ association, told AFP.
On the roof of the 25-storey block, overlooking a sea of residential towers stretching across the horizon, he dusted fresh snowfall off dozens of solar panels with a wooden brush.
The 400-odd residents pooled 700,000 hryvnias ($16,200) to buy and install them, along with the batteries and other required equipment.
Russian missile and drone barrages have pushed Kyiv into its most serious energy crisis of the war.
Electricity is turned off for hours on end to ration supplies, and more than 1,000 of Kyiv’s 12,000 high-rise residential buildings have been without heating for the past month after a heating station was destroyed.
The back-up supply in Biletsky’s block meant the lift — unlike in many buildings — was still shuttling up and down, and electric pumps were able to send water to the top floors.
Without it, there would be none above the ninth floor, said Biletsky.
“After the inverter was installed, we have constant heating, hot and cold water,” said Tetyana Taran, who lives on the 20th floor.
The inverter is the device that automatically draws supplies from the battery when the mains switch off.
“The fact that I also get to use the lift is great,” the 47-year-old added.
In her building in central Kyiv, Tetyana Chernyshenko is another person who persuaded her neighbours to club together for a generator.
“We printed lists, collected signatures, posted notices explaining what it will be and what it’s for,” she said.
Now they were waiting for it to arrive.
“People in this building are far from poor. Most have installed autonomous systems for themselves,” Chernyshenko, 55, explained.
Her family opted for solar panels.
“But heating and elevators can’t be fixed locally. You can’t solve that with a battery in your own flat.”
Not everybody is enthusiastic about contributing, however.
Cut off from heating since January, Tetyana Kolisnichenko, 47, wishes residents of her Soviet-era block would make the investment.
She has been filling plastic bottles with hot water to keep warm.
There is an empty space beneath her windowsills where the radiators used to sit — removed after the water started freezing and bursting the pipes.
The stairwell next door “bought new radiators, repaired the utilities together,” she said, enviously.
“Unfortunately, our entrance is not as close-knit.”
Still she was trying to look on the bright side.
After her building sprung a leak she made friends with her upstairs neighbour while trying to find the source.
“For me, this is the main achievement.”
Even in buildings that go for the investment, not everybody is happy to chip in.
Biletsky said around 20–30 percent either did not contribute or did so only partially.
Those on the lower floors are among the most reluctant.
“They say to me: ‘Denys, I don’t need your lifts, your backup power, your batteries, I’m fine’ … We can’t force anyone.”
Taran was less stoic, recounting a run-in with a neighbour who complained about the lights being out on the staircase.
“Like, wait a minute, you didn’t pay anything at all, and yet you still have complaints?” she said with a snicker.
The solution is far from ideal.
When outages drag on for hours, the back-up batteries don’t have time to recharge, forcing Biletsky to cut the lift off to prioritise water pumps.
Despite the snags, the joint effort had brought the building closer together in the face of the unrelenting Russian attacks, he said.
“It did unite us. People have become more like a family.”
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