Learning to Rebuild
News
Partner Michael Innerarity presents the National Unity Center at the Ukraine Recovery Conference 2026.
How can architecture contribute to rebuilding a society? This question was at the heart of the Ukraine Recovery Conference 2026 in Gdańsk, where the Ukrainian Catholic University (UCU) presented the National Unity Center, a project that places education, lifelong learning, and human connection at the centre of Ukraine's long-term recovery. Together with UCU, Behnisch Architekturbüro is proud to contribute to a place designed not simply as a building, but as an investment in people.
The National Unity Center builds on a long-standing collaboration between Behnisch Architekturbüro and the Ukrainian Catholic University. Following the completion of the Metropolitan Sheptytsky Center in 2017, the new project represents the next chapter in a shared commitment to creating places that foster learning, dialogue, and community. Nearly a decade after shaping an important part of the UCU campus, this collaboration continues with a vision for architecture that supports both people and society.
Located adjacent to the existing campus, the National Unity Center has been conceived as a living-learning environment that integrates education, residential life, and collaborative spaces within one coherent architectural framework. The seven-storey building will provide approximately 6,000 square metres of flexible learning environments, co-working spaces, residential units, meeting areas, and public facilities designed to support a wide range of users and activities. At its core, however, the project is not about a building. It is about people. The Center is intended for those who will play an active role in rebuilding Ukraine: veterans and their families, internally displaced people, educators, entrepreneurs, public-sector leaders, students, and international partners. It offers a place where knowledge can be shared, new skills developed, and relationships strengthened across disciplines, generations, and regions.
Its educational vision is built around four interconnected pathways—Upskilling, Reskilling, Re-enter, and Return—establishing the Center as a platform for lifelong learning and institutional renewal. The project reflects the understanding that recovery is not only about physical reconstruction, but about strengthening human capital, leadership, and civic responsibility that will shape Ukraine's future.
During the Ukraine Recovery Conference, UCU presented the project to an international audience of government representatives, businesses, institutions, and civil society organisations. As part of the event, the Ukrainian Catholic University and Behnisch Architekturbüro signed a Memorandum of Cooperation, reaffirming their shared commitment to bringing the project to life. Michael Innerarity presented the architectural vision behind the design, emphasising flexibility, adaptability, and the creation of spaces capable of responding to evolving educational needs for decades to come.
The architectural concept reflects principles that have long guided Behnisch Architekturbüro's work: openness, adaptability, and environmental responsibility. Passive façade shading, integrated photovoltaic panels, and carefully considered daylight strategies reduce energy demand while creating healthy, comfortable learning environments. Sustainability is embedded in the building's performance and in the everyday experience of its users.
The National Unity Center is a place where people will learn, reconnect, exchange ideas, and build trust. A place designed to strengthen the human networks that will shape Ukraine's future.





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