When a bridge goes down in Kharkiv Oblast, local engineers file a standardised damage report within 72 hours. The entry is geolocated, timestamped, and cross-checked against pre-war infrastructure records. It then feeds into a national digital twin that now holds damage profiles on more than 340,000 individual pieces of public infrastructure.
That is not a small number. It is the entire skeleton of a country.
The platform behind it — called Відбудова, meaning Rebuild — went fully live in mid-2024. Estonia's e-governance agency provided the technical architecture. The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development bankrolled it. The system does two things at once: it gives reconstruction planners the project pipeline they need to sequence priorities and allocate funding, and it generates an audit trail that no single actor can quietly rewrite after the fact.
That second function is not a footnote. International donors channelling an estimated €180 billion into Ukraine's reconstruction demanded accountability mechanisms that conventional aid monitoring simply cannot deliver. Відбудова gives them one: satellite imagery, contractor reports, and physical inspection sign-offs are locked into a single record. The paper trail does not bend.
As of April 2025, the platform tracks 14,200 active reconstruction projects. EU-contracted independent assessors found a 97 percent match between reported and physically verified completion status. That figure would be considered extraordinary in a peacetime programme. In an active war zone, it is something else entirely.
"We are building the country back," said Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov. "We are building it back on a foundation that cannot be stolen from underneath it."