Ukraine’s network of industrial parks continues to expand, with new participants, investments, and government initiatives announced across the country, according to the Deputy Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada Committee on Economic Development Dmytro Kysylevskyy.
Here are the key developments from recent weeks.
New participants and projects
The Ukrainian Weighing Company and Kharkiv Industrial Group will join the Chortkiv West Industrial Park in Ternopil region. Both companies plan to build new production facilities on-site by 2026, according to the Chortkiv City Council.
In Chernihiv region, Nosivka City Council signed an agreement with private enterprise Teplychne to establish and develop the Nosivski Hospodarstva Industrial Park. The 14-hectare site will host a production facility for jams and compotes.
A new logistics complex, FROST HUB Vinnytsia, a Class A facility featuring multi-temperature warehouses covering 17,000 square meters, will be built within the VinIndustri Industrial Park. The project’s managers have signed a participation and sublease agreement with the Vinnytsia Municipal Investment Fund. Construction is set to begin in spring 2026.
Meanwhile, Mykolaiv region is preparing to launch Ukraine’s largest industrial park, spanning 250 hectares. According to regional governor Vitaliy Kim, the operator will be a company with proven experience managing similar projects in Bila Tserkva.
Partnerships and social impact
The Friendly Wind Technology Industrial Park has become a financial partner of the Perechyn community in Zakarpattia region for the construction of a new sports complex at the Heroes of the 68th Battalion Lyceum. Two years after the park’s creation, Perechyn’s local budget has tripled.
In Ivano-Frankivsk region, part of the Kalush Industrial Hub is up for sale. The property includes over 36,000 square meters of production and administrative facilities and 9.36 hectares of land. The asking price is 3.8 million US dollars.
Government and regional initiatives
The Lviv City Council has exempted industrial parks damaged during the early October shelling from land tax until the end of 2026.
The government has added two new sites to the official state register of industrial parks: Phoenix – Valley of Innovation in Drohobych, Lviv region (11.12 hectares), and Azortech in Andrushivka, Zhytomyr region (21.8 hectares).
Concepts and future parks
In Cherkasy region, DK-Industrial presented its concept for the Agro-Innovation Hub Industrial Park in Uman. The planned park, covering around 23 hectares, is currently under further design development.
In Ivano-Frankivsk region, Horodenka City Council approved GCZ 22’s initiative to establish the Pokuttya Industrial Park on the 27.56-hectare site of a former sugar plant.
In Vinnytsia, Alterra Group unveiled plans for the Formatsiya Vinnytsia Industrial Park, the second site in its “Formatsiya” network, following the success of the first park in Lviv.
The Podilsk City Council in Odessa region has leased a 37.39-hectare land plot to Eco Solutions for 30 years to develop the Southern Industrial Park.
International cooperation
A multilateral memorandum on industrial park development was signed between the Swiss-Ukrainian project UCORD, the Khmelnytskyi Regional Military Administration, the Regional Council, the Slavuta City Council, the Khmelnytskyi Regional Development Agency, and the management company Slavuta-Service. The Regional Development Agency has begun preparing a project proposal that, after independent evaluation, could receive up to 600,000 Swiss francs in co-financing from the Swiss governmen