The temple of the St. Panteleimon’s Nunnery in Feofaniia is a monument of architecture and urban planning of local significance. The construction of the modern building began in 1905 to the design of Yevhen Yermakov on the site of the Church of the Miracle of the Archangel Michael (1802–1803). The Nunnery was consecrated in 1914. It then had one main and 2 additional altars. With the advent of Soviet power in the 1920s, the activity of the temple was suspended, and during the World War II, the building suffered significant ruining. In the post-war period, there were shops of the Institute of Mechanics of the Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR where scientists researched underwater explosions and worked on the creation of Europe’s first digital Small Electronic Calculating Machine. In 1990, the St. Panteleimon’s Cathedral was returned to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, and 3 years later, a hermitage of the Kyiv Holy Intercession Nunnery was opened at the Cathedral. One of the temple’s main shrines is a part of the relics of the St. Panteleimon the Healer, to which is attributed miraculous power.