Debris from downed missiles fell overnight on buildings, a park and a school, Ukrainian officials said.
In the village of Tarasivka in the Kyiv region, the extent of the destruction was clear as locals attempted to shift the extensive debris.
![lcimg-bbd8a3e9-2b4b-4390-8ed0-bb3b55e0c8ee.png](https://liveblog.digitalimages.sky/lc-images-sky/lcimg-bbd8a3e9-2b4b-4390-8ed0-bb3b55e0c8ee.png)
![lcimg-54a2d0f0-29c4-4e0c-9ac8-6bf694e0e9e9.png](https://liveblog.digitalimages.sky/lc-images-sky/lcimg-54a2d0f0-29c4-4e0c-9ac8-6bf694e0e9e9.png)
![lcimg-8006b2c5-4542-4f1c-8419-3b2beaa33b31.png](https://liveblog.digitalimages.sky/lc-images-sky/lcimg-8006b2c5-4542-4f1c-8419-3b2beaa33b31.png)
In Kyiv, Liudmyla Savchuk, a 57-year-old teacher, said the blast broke all her windows, as well as an entrance door.
"Then there was another explosion in a couple of seconds, 20 or 30 seconds. We're cleaning everything now," she said.
"Humans don't do such things. There are no military objects here, nothing – just an apartment block... The missiles fell in the park," said Roman Feshchenko, 76, a resident in the northwest of Kyiv.
Serhiy Popko, the head of the city's military administration, said: "Kyiv has not experienced such a powerful attack since spring."