The Museum, dedicated to the great Ukrainian singer’s life and work, was established in 1994 in his parental house, where Ivan Kozlovskyi was born and grew up. The house itself was recognized a monument of history and architecture of late 19th to early 20th century in 2009. The recreated interior of the museum estate shows family photos, Ivan Kozlovskyi’s personal belongings (opera costumes, claviers, books from his private library), ethnographic materials, letters, film and video materials, rare audio recordings from 1945–1975). The museum complex also includes a park with intersected walkways, designed by Ivan Kozlovskyi together with the architect Yakiv Drutsky in 1960s. This is where the singer bequeathed to bury him, but that never happened. A part of the park, Oleksandr Dovzhenko apple orchard, was planted by Ivan Kozlovskyi himself together with his friends, such as Maksym Rylskyi, Pavlo Tychyna, Oles Honchar and others. A traditional Kupala Festival takes place in the Museum Estate every year. The Festival’s program features performances by professional and folklore bands, straw weaving, pottery, embroidery workshops, Cossack kulish cooking, Kupala rites and Ukrainian ethnic games.