Zalyv Shipbuilding yard

The Zaliv Shipbuilding yard (Russian: Судостроительный завод «Залив», Ukrainian: Суднобудівний завод «Залив») is located in Kerch, Crimea and specializes in the construction of tankers and container carriers, and the repair of ships of different types and tonnage.[2]

Zaliv
Native name
Залив
Industryshipbuilding
Founded1938
Headquarters,
OwnerOOO Vesta (60%)
OOO Enkor (40%)[1]
Websitezalivkerch.com
Ukraine Shipyards
There are three shipyards located in Mykolaiv: Black Sea Shipyard, Okean Shipyard, and Mykolayiv.

The shipyard was also known as Kamysh-Burun Zavod,[3] and Soviet Shipyard No. 532 named after Butoma Boris Evstaf'evich.

History

The joint stock company Zalyv Shipyard was founded in 1938. It is situated on the shore of the Kerch Strait, between two seas, the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov. From 1945 to 1980 the yard built about 600 ships, including sea trawlers, small torpedo boats, fishing boats and barges. Since the 1960s it builds tankers.

The shipyard was formerly affiliated with the KrAZ Holding Company (Kremenchuk) and previous ownership / contracts / share % with Norwegian and foreign shipbuilding firms.. As of April 2017 the company is owned by OOO Vesta (60%) and OOO Enkor (40%).[1]

Facilities and services

The shipyard occupies an area of 350 acres (0.55 sq mi). It has a graving dock that is 360 meters long and 60 meters wide. It can accommodate ships with a draught of 13 meters. Two gantry cranes, each with a 200-tons lifting capacity, are part of this dock.

Specialization

  • Type "Krym" Project 1511 tanker was built 1974-1980, created in 1973 by "Baltsudnoproekt"[4][5]
  • Project 12990 Pobeda tanker
  • Panamax was built 1980-1996
  • nuclear-powered icebreaking cargo ship Sevmorput in the 1980s
  • series of stationary oil platform
  • several military frigates
  • Krivak I class (along with Yantar and Severnaya Verf)
  • Krivak III class (exclusively at Zalyv).

Building

  • Project 22800 corvette Tsiklon
  • Project 22160 corvettes / patrol boats
  • Project 23900 amphibious assault ships
  • Project 23560 destroyers / cruisers / ASWs (planned)
  • Tankers, Oceanographic, Coast Guard MVD and other vessels
  • Many of the metal hardware beams barges and else of the Crimean Bridge
  • Passenger hydrofoil boats (hulls)
Name Class and type Plant № Laid Launched
Simferopol Pr. A145 passenger ship (SPM-150) 701 5 September 2014
Kerch Pr. A145 passenger ship (SPM-150) 702 5 September 2014
Pr. A145 passenger ship (SPM-150) 703
Pr. 23131 marine tanker 301 26 December 2014
Pr. 23131 marine tanker 302 26 December 2014
Volga Pr. 15310 cable ship nd 6 January 2015
Vyatka Pr. 15310 cable ship nd 6 January 2015
Pr. A163 search and rescue ship 112 28 July 2015
Pr. A163 search and rescue ship 113 9 December 2015
Pavel Derzhavin Pr. 22160 patrol ship 163 2015–2016
Sergej Kotov Pr. 22160 patrol ship 164 2015–2016
Tsiklon Pr. 22800 small missile ship 256 (? nd) 26 July 2016
Pr. 19910 small hydrographic ship 801 26 July 2016
Pr. 19910 small hydrographic ship 802 18 November 2016
Amur Pr. 19910 small hydrographic ship 803 30 July 2016
Pr. 19910 small hydrographic ship 804 Early 2017
Pr. 19910 small hydrographic ship 805 Early 2017
Ivan Rogov Pr. 23900 landing helicopter dock 20 July 2020
Mitrofan Moskalenko Pr. 23900 landing helicopter dock 20 July 2020
Pr. 23560 destroyer/cruiser/ASW (planned)

Notable vessels

The Krivak class frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy is the current flagship of the Ukrainian navy.[6]
Name Class and type Plant № Laid Launched
Bezzavetnyy Pr. 1135 frigate 1973 1977
Pobeda Pr. 12990 marine tanker 1981 1988
Sevmorput Nuclear-powered LASH carrier 1982 1988
Hetman Sahaydachniy (U130) Pr. 11351 frigate 1991 1992
gollark: Oops.
gollark: I have this status page (it covers a bunch of other things): It would be possible to infer them
gollark: The status page is quite nice at least.
gollark: Essentially, this exemplifies half of what I hate about the modern web.
gollark: - literally downloads 3MB of files- recaptcha- giant irrelevant background image- long loading times

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.