Ivan Franko-class passenger ship

The Ivan Franko-class passenger ship (project 301, in Germany known as Seefa 750[3]) is a class of Soviet ocean liners and cruise ships, operated by the Baltic State Shipping Company (BGMP) and Black Sea Shipping Company (ChMMP or BLASCO).[4] The five Soviet ships Ivan Franko, Aleksandr Pushkin, Taras Shevchenko, Shota Rustaveli and Mikhail Lermontov were constructed in 1963–1972 by the East German company VEB Mathias-Thesen Werft, in Wismar. The class was named after its lead ship, which took its name from the Ukrainian poet Ivan Franko. The only remainder of the five is Aleksandr Pushkin – now known as Marco Polo.

MS Marco Polo in Tallinn, 2 August 2012
Class overview
Builders: VEB Mathias-Thesen Werft, Wismar, East Germany
Preceded by: Mikhail Kalinin class (project 101/SeeFa 340)
Built: 1963–1972[1]
In service: 1964–present
Planned: 5
Building: 5
Completed: 5
Active: 1
General characteristics
Type: Ocean linerCruise ship
Tonnage: 19,861 GRT[2]
Length: 175.79 m (577 ft) overall[2]
Beam: 23.61 m (77 ft)[2]
Height: 16.19 m (53 ft)[2]
Draught: 8.11 m (27 ft)[2]
Decks: 8 passenger decks
Installed power: 2 × Sulzer-Cegielski 7RND76 diesels, 15,666 kW (21,008 hp)[1]
Propulsion: 2 propellers
Speed: 20.45 knots (37.87 km/h; 23.53 mph)[2]
Capacity: 750 passengers

Description and construction

The Ivan Franko class surpassed the earlier Mikhail Kalinin class as Germany's (in both parts of Germany) largest passenger ships after World War II. With a length of 176 metres (577 ft 5 in)[5] Marco Polo was 54 metres (177 ft 2 in) longer than the prior largest passenger ship, Mikhail Kalinin and its classmates. Marco Polo also was 7.5 metres (24 ft 7 in) wider, and with a gross register tonnage of 19,861, almost three times larger.

The construction of this class featured some notable differences from contemporary ships built in the west. Among other things they offered cabins for six people and had three taps in the bathrooms – for hot, cold and sea water – Both of these features had been long abandoned in western liners. The ships also featured certain forward-looking features, such as all outside accommodation for passengers as well as the crew, and an indoor/outdoor swimming pool with a sliding glass roof.

Ocean liners/cruise ships of Project 301/Seefa 750

Ivan Franko class passenger ships
No.Original nameEnglish transliteration
1Иван Франко (Frank)Ivan Franko (Frank)
2Александр Пушкин (Marco Polo)Aleksandr Pushkin (Marco Polo)
3Тарас Шевченко (Tara)Taras Shevchenko (Tara)
4Шота Руставели (Assedo)Shota Rustaveli (Assedo)
5Михаил ЛермонтовMikhail Lermontov

Overview

Ivan Franko class passenger ships
Year of buildHull NoImageNameFirst operatorPort of RegistryFlagIMO-No.Status
1964125Ivan FrankoChMMPOdessaKingstown5415901 originally, Ivan Franko; sold in 1997 to Polluks Shipping; out of service since 21 July 1997; scrapped in Alang [6]
1965126Marco PoloBGMPLeningradVladivostokNassau6417097 originally Aleksandr Pushkin[7]
1966127TaraChMMPOdessaMonroviaOdessa6508195originally, Taras Shevtchenko; scrapped in 2005[8]
1968128AssedoChMMPOdessaMonroviaOdessaKingstown6707753 originally, Shota Rustaveli; scrapped in 2003[9]
1972129Mikhail LermontovBGMPLeningrad7042318 sank on 16 February 1986 near Gannet Point (New Zealand) [10]
gollark: I might implement continuous Minesweeper, could be fun.
gollark: I actually just fixed the automatic code inference thing by using the automatic code inference.
gollark: And I might not have time to finish the automatic code inference.
gollark: I don't know if I have enough time to implement the fully general polymorphism logic, though, or the generalized exception handler.
gollark: I already did that.

See also

References

  1. M/S Aleksandr Pushkin(in Swedish)
  2. Регистровая книга морских судов СССР 1964–1965 [Register Book of Sea-going Ships of the USSR] (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2013-11-03. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  3. "DDR Schiffbau". german-shipbuilding.com (in German). Archived from the original on 2013-06-15. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  4. "Ivan Franko Class". simplonpc.co.uk. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  5. "Ivan Franko data in English". Archived from the original on 2012-07-30. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
  6. Frank (Иван Франко → 06.1997)(in Russian)
  7. Marco Polo (до 1991 Александр Пушкин)(in Russian)
  8. Tara (Тарас Шевченко → 08.1995 Taras Shevchenko → 08.2001 Тарас Шевченко → 10.2004) (in Russian)
  9. Assedo (Шота Руставели → 2001)
  10. Михаил Лермонтов(in Russian)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.