Water and electricity supplies have been restored in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, a day after being knocked out by Russian missile attacks.
"Water supplies to the homes of Kyiv residents have been fully restored. Electricity supplies in Kyiv have also been restored" city mayor Vitali Klitschko said on social media.
But Klitschko said there would still be planned power cuts in the city "because of the considerable deficit in the power system after the barbaric attacks of the aggressor".
The Ukrainian military said Russia had launched 55 cruise missiles and dozens of other munitions across the country on Monday.
Presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovich on Tuesday called the bombardment "one of the most massive shellings of our territory by the army of the Russian Federation".
But he noted that, thanks to improved air defences, including with Western aid, "the destruction is not as critical as it could be".
Ukraine says Russian strikes over the past month have destroyed around a third of its power stations and has urged Ukrainians to save on electricity as much as possible.
More evacuations in Kherson
As the battle for control of Kherson continues in southern Ukraine, the Russian occupying forces have announced the evacuation of a further 70,000 residents, in anticipation of a renewed offensive by Ukrainian forces.
Seventy thousand civilians have already been moved from locations closer to the front.
Russian officials have justified the evacuations, mostly from a zone on the banks of the River Dnipro, by saying they fear the destruction of an upstream hydroelectric dam by Ukrainian attackers, and the flooding of the valley.