Great Port of Saint Petersburg

59°52′50″N 30°11′57″E / 59.88056°N 30.19917°E / 59.88056; 30.19917DetailsType of harbourSeaSizeLargeStatisticsWebsite
The Port of Saint Petersburg
Industrial port in Saint Petersburg, Russia

You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian. (January 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
  • View a machine-translated version of the Russian article.
  • Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
  • Consider adding a topic to this template: there are already 1,241 articles in the main category, and specifying|topic= will aid in categorization.
  • Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
  • You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at [[:ru:Морской порт Санкт-Петербург]]; see its history for attribution.
  • You may also add the template {{Translated|ru|Морской порт Санкт-Петербург}} to the talk page.
  • For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.

The Great Port of St. Petersburg (Russian: Большой порт Санкт-Петербург) or Port of St. Petersburg is a major seaport serving the city of St. Petersburg in northwest Russia. The port's water area is 164.6 km2 (630,000 square meters)[citation needed][clarification needed]. The mooring line is 31 km long[clarification needed] and the water is 25 metres (82 ft) deep at the port's deepest anchorages. Since 2011, the port has been under the authority of a state-owned enterprise (federal government agency), the Port Authority of the Great Port of St. Petersburg. This agency oversees commercial navigation in the seaport of St. Petersburg and beyond in the designated areas of responsibility of the Russian Federation.

History

In 1869, Nikolay Putilov (1820–1880)—a Russian naval officer, mathematician, engineer, metallurgist, entrepreneur, co-founder of the Obukhov factory, and founder of the Putilov factory—began preparations for the Sea Port of St. Petersburg with a sea canal from Kronstadt to St. Petersburg. On June 13, 1874, Tsar Alexander II approved a provision "On the Temporary Administration of the St. Petersburg Sea." The general direction of the channel was approved by Alexander on August 21 of the same year. On October 26, a contract for the production of works and supplies on the St. Petersburg Canal was signed. N. I. Putilov "with his comrades" received a contract order for the works. After Putilov's sudden death, the project was completed by his companions P. A. Boreysha [ru] and S. P. Maksimovich, assisted by the Finland Swedish engineer F. E. Edelheim [sv]. On May 15, 1885, the 32 km (20-mile) channel was opened to the passage of ships, and a new Maritime Trade Port was opened.[1]

Putilov was buried, at his request, on the bank of the Ekateringofka River on Gladky Island, commanding a view over his factory, his port, and the Morskoy Canal. A chapel by architect F. S. Kharlamov was erected on his grave. His remains were re-buried in the crypt of St. Nicholas Church in 1907, which was built by architect V. A. Kosyakov in 1901–06 on what is today Stachek Avenue. His grave was destroyed in 1951.[2]

General information

The central unit of the Great Port of St. Petersburg is located on and around the islands of the Neva River Delta, in the Nevsky Lip of the eastern part of the Gulf of Finland, an arm of the Baltic Sea. The port includes the berths for maritime trade; forest, fish and river ports; an oil terminal; shipbuilding, ship repair and other industries; a sea passenger terminal; a river passenger terminal; piers at Kronstadt and Lomonosov; and the Gorskaya and Bronka facilities. They are connected by an extensive system of channels and fairways. The sea trade port includes about 200 berths with depths of up to 11.9 metres (39 ft). It is divided into four districts. The container terminal includes berths 82–87, and both container ships and roll-on/roll-off vessels are accepted for processing.

The first and second areas of the seaport are served by the New Port railway station, the third and fourth by the Avtovo railway station.[citation needed]

The port fleet includes service and support vessels belonging to various organizations, including more than twenty tugs of various capacities, icebreakers, oil harvesters, water cannon, boat collectors[clarification needed], boaters[clarification needed], pilot boats, raid boats[clarification needed], fireboats, and barges.[citation needed]

Composition

The Great Port of St. Petersburg includes:

  • Pools:
    • East
    • Baroque
    • Passenger
    • Forest Maul Raid
    • Coal Harbour
  • Vasileostrovsk cargo port
  • Berths in Kronstadt
  • Berths in Lomonosov
  • Bronka deepwater port

Operations

Oil products, metals, forest products, containers, coal, ore, chemical cargoes, and scrap metal are loaded in the port of St. Petersburg. The cargo turnover in January–February 2016 amounted to 7.5 million tons, down 7.0% compared to the same period in 2015.

The main stevedoring companies operating in the port are the Seaport of St. Petersburg, NEVA-METALL, Baltic Bulker Terminal, Moby Dick LLC, St. Petersburg Petroleum Terminal, First Container Terminal, and Petrolesport.[citation needed]

Year Million tons[citation needed]
1913 7.3
1940 3.18
1945 0.79
1950 1.37
1960 6.3
1970 7.6
1980 12.2
1997 20.5
2000 32
2005 57.5
2010 58
2011 60
2012 57.8
2013 58
2014 61.2
2015 51.5
2016 48.6
2017 53.6
2018 59.3
2019 59.9

See also

References

  1. ^ "Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia". www.encspb.ru. Retrieved 21 April 2021.
  2. ^ "Saint Petersburg encyclopaedia". www.encspb.ru. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Azov Sea
Baltic Sea
Barents Sea
  • Murmansk1
  • Naryan-Mar
  • Severomorsk
  • Varandey
Bering Sea
  • Anadyr
  • Provideniya
Black Sea
Caspian Sea
East Siberian Sea
Japan sea
Kara Sea
  • Dixon
  • Dudinka
  • Igarka
Laptev Sea
  • Khatanga
  • Tiksi
Pacific Ocean
  • Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky1
Okhotsk Sea
White Sea
  • v
  • t
  • e
St. Petersburg sea and river terminals
River terminal
  • Marina
Big port Saint Petersburg
Sea transport
Passenger seaports
Cargo seaports
  • Seaport Saint Petersburg
  • Primorsk harbor
Multitasking ports
  • Kronstadt harbor
  • Lomonosov harbor
See also
Rail terminals
Landing stages