NYYLO a.s. - Jsme moderní logistická skupina

Nyylo Fund

In 2013, NYYLO a.s. decided to expand the ranks of donors to the Ústí Community Foundation and established its charitable NYYLO Fund. Its goal is to permanently support various public benefit activities in the Ústí nad Labem region with an emphasis on supporting issues that currently concern the Ústí nad Labem region.

Examples of supported projects

Dolský mlýn, z.s.
Petrified Fates (10 000 Kč)

A contribution to a local initiative to repair the stone tombstones in Všemile, which is an integral part of their intention to gradually save the former cemetery of the original inhabitants of the village and is a reminder of the close coexistence of Czechs and Germans in the Sudetenland.

Society Pod Studencem
Graphic design and translation of the book „ŽIVOT OBYVATEL V KRAJINĚ POD STUDENCEM V BĚHU ČASU“ (40 000 Kč)


Contribution to the graphic processing of archival documents, comparative photographs and translation of a book about the life of the inhabitants in the landscape below Studenec with the aim of its later publication to contribute to the deepening of the relationship of the current inhabitants to their home and to the feeling of an intimate connection with the people, the landscape and the times.

Society for the Restoration of the Chapel Botschen
Window to the chapel (50 000 Kč)


Contribution to a local initiative for the next stage of the rescue of the Art Nouveau chapel of the Botschen family from the end of the 19th century, hidden in the woods near Libouche, namely for the restoration of the stained glass window above the entrance to the chapel. The long-term goal of the association is to preserve this unique building, to restore and make accessible the forest park that surrounds it, and to document and pass on the stories of the Botschen family, which has been instrumental in shaping not only the village of Libouchec.

At the top of a small wooded hill near the village of Libouchec
you will find a hidden Art Nouveau chapel from the end of the 19th century.
Nowadays, like the history of its original owner
the chapel is forgotten, devastated and dilapidated. The Chapel Restoration Society is in charge of its restoration.