Chernomorski Factory
History
In 1895, the shipyard was established as the Association of Shipyards and Foundry Works (Russian: Obshchestvo sudostroitel'nykh i liteinykh zavodov)––a Belgian-owned company and began building warships in 1901. It was merged with the Black Sea Mechanical and Foundry Works (Russian: Chernomorskii mekhanicheskii i liteinyi zavod) in 1908 and was renamed Associated Nikolaev Shipbuilding, Mechanical and Iron Works (Russian: Nikolaevskoe obshchestvo sudostroitel'nykh, mekhanicheskikh i liteinykh zavodov) in 1908. It came under the control of Share Society Nikolaev Works and Shipyards (Russian: Aktsionernoe obshchstvo Nikolaevskikh zavodov i verfei (ONZiV)) in 1911 and was nicknamed the "Naval Shipyard". Around this time it was supported by the British armaments company of Vickers Limited. By 1914 the shipyard employed some 10,400 workers, which made it one of the largest industrial firms in Russia.
After the war, it was renamed the Black Sea Shipbuilding Works (Russian: Chernomorskii sudostroitel'nyi zavod) when it came under the control of the Bolsheviks. During the 1930s it was renamed in honor of André Marti and became the Marti (South) Yard. On 30 December 1936, the yard was redesignated as Shipyard No. 198 (named for Marti). During these early years, the yard constructed surface warships and Dekabrist-class submarines.
In January 1938, Vyacheslav Molotov, the Chairman of the People’s Commissar Council, declared the following:
Our mighty Soviet power must have such a sea and ocean fleet that would comply with her interests and would be worthy of our great mission.
It was then the government introduced the 10-year Big Shipbuilding Program. The plan included the construction of battleships and heavy cruisers which would represent the ocean might and strength of the country.
On 19 October 1940, the government decided to terminate battleship and heavy cruiser construction. It was ordered to concentrate all their efforts on small-size and medium-size warship construction. However, the completion of ships of various previously laid down classes continued. On the whole, the Soviet shipbuilding was once again re-directed for submarine and light surface ship construction. Nevertheless, by the 1950s, an estimated 65 Whiskey-class submarines, Sverdlov-class light cruisers, and the Stalingrad-class battlecruiser were built.
During the 1960s, the Moskva-class helicopter carriers and the Kiev-class VSTOL aircraft carrying cruisers were constructed. The fourth Kiev-class, Admiral Gorshkov, was launched in 1982 and later, in 1985, the first Kuznetsov-class, Admiral Kuznetsov, was launched. The Admiral Kuznetsov's hull design is based on the Admiral Gorshkov but is larger with a full load displacement, 58,500 tons as compared to Admiral Gorshkov's 40,400 tons. KH-11 satellite photographs of the construction of the Admiral Kuznetsov were leaked to Jane's Defence Weekly in 1985 by Samuel Loring Morison, a naval intelligence analyst with the U.S. Navy.
Commercial ships and naval auxiliaries were, and continue to be constructed there. Commercial ships are primarily dry-cargo ships, fish-factory ships, and large trawlers. In the late 1970s, the shipyard constructed two large trawlers for the State Committee of Fisheries of Ukraine.
Facilities and services
The State joint stock company Chernomorsudoproekt is one of the leading ship design firms in Ukraine. The firm was founded in 1956 around the design personnel of Nikolayev shipbuilding enterprises. The enterprise has built and exported vessels to Sweden, Bulgaria, Norway, Romania, Great Britain, Germany, Portugal, Kuwait, India and Greece.
The shipyard had two main areas covering 500 acres (2.0 km). The first slipway (No. 0) had end-launch building ways and blocking docks. The second was a horizontal building slip (No. 1) with a covered launch.
Length | Width | Lifting Capacity | |
---|---|---|---|
Slipway No. 0 | 330 meters (1,080 ft) | 40 meters (130 ft) | Two Kone(cranes) gantry cranes each capable of lifting up to 900 800 tons |
Slipway No. 1 | 400 meters (1,300 ft) | 18 meters (59 ft) | Horizontal, launching effected with the help of floating dock |
Floating dock | 120 meters (390 ft) | 41.5 meters (136 ft) | Up to 7,500 tons |
3 quays | 860 meters (2,820 ft) total | - | Portal cranes with a lifting capacity of 25-40 tons |
The largest slipway (No.0) was capable of constructing tankers, bulk carriers, supply vessels, and roll-on/roll-off ships. There was also a high-capacity pre-slipway area of 14,000 square meters (150,000 sq ft), where blocks up to 1,500 metric tons (1,500 long tons; 1,700 short tons) could be assembled.
The second slipway (No.1) was a flow-position line, located in the sheltered slipway and was actually a closed-loop autonomous production line. Launching of vessels was effected with the help of the floating dock. The final fitting-out was performed near the South outfitting quay which was 546 meters (1,791 ft).
The shipyard consisted of several workshops to include: the slipway workshop, assembly and welding workshop, plating workshop, and an outfitting workshop. The assembly and welding workshop was capable of manufacturing flat and volumetric sections up to 180 metric tons (180 long tons; 200 short tons).
According to their public website, the shipyard also included:
- Specialized services to include the manufacturing of propeller shafts with length up to 30 meters (98 ft) and the manufacturing of unit-cast and welded anchor chains.
- A multi-branch network of 43 kilometers (27 mi) of railways and 29 kilometers (18 mi) of roads.
- Tug boats capable of 60 ton bollard pull which can provide escort services to tankers up to 70,000 DWT in the narrow waters.
As of 2008 the shipyard was a major enterprise consisting of shipbuilding, machine-building, and metallurgy. The shipyard had its own design center with a qualified engineering staff and modern computer equipment. Their integrated shipbuilding system (FORAN) included computer-aided design (CAD), engineering (CAE), and manufacturing (CAM) of vessels.
Vessels
Vessels constructed in this shipyard were numerous. The table below lists many of these vessels to include when they were laid and launched.
Notes: NATO class only shown if applicable; classes of vessels launched before 1949 are provided as originally designated. Most vessel names provided is the name given when launched–some ships may have since been renamed.
See also
- List of ships of Russia by project number
- List of Soviet and Russian submarine classes
- Admiral Makarov National University of Shipbuilding
Notes
- ^ "Ликвидирован один из старейших судостроительных заводов Украины". sharij.net (in Russian). 2021-07-05. Retrieved 2023-12-24.
- ^ "На Украине ликвидирован завод, построивший все советские авианосцы. "Незалежная" разбазарила все судостроительное наследство СССР". mk.ru (in Russian). 2021-07-05. Retrieved 2023-12-24.
- ^ "уникальный судостроительный завод на Украине довели до краха". ria.ru (in Russian). 2021-10-11. Retrieved 2023-12-24.
- ^ Harrison, et al.
- ^ Breyer, pp. 147–48
- ^ Polmar & Noor, p. 326
- ^ Polmar, pp. 405–06
- ^ Chernomorsky Plant, GlobalSecurity.org Website, (Accessed 6/4/2008)
- ^ Official Chernomorsky Shipbuilding Yard Website
- ^ "Warships of the Black Sea Fleet".
- ^ Originally Baku, later sold to India as INS Vikramaditya
- ^ Originally Riga then renamed Leonid Brezhnev in 1990
- ^ sold incomplete to the PRC, commissioned as Liaoning
Bibliography
- Breyer, Siegfried (1992). Soviet Warship Development: Volume 1: 1917-1937. London: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-85177-604-3.
- Harrison, Mark; Cooper, Julian; Dexter, Keith; Rodionov, Ivan (2003). The Numbered Factories and Other Establishments of the Soviet Defence Industry Complex, 1927 to 1968, Part I, Factories & Shipyards (Version 8 ed.). Warwick, UK: University of Warwick, Department of Economics.
- Polmar, Norman (1983). Guide to the Soviet Navy (3rd ed.). Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-239-7.
- Polmar, Norman & Noot, Jurrien (1991). Submarines of the Russian and Soviet Navies, 1718–1990. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-570-1.
External links
- Chernomorsky Plant, Federation of American Scientists Website