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Gulf of Odesa

Bays of UkraineBlack Sea stubsGeography of OdesaGulfs of the Black SeaOdesa Oblast geography stubs
New Vorontsov lighthouse in Odessa, Ukraine
New Vorontsov lighthouse in Odessa, Ukraine

The Gulf of Odesa, or Odesa Bay, (Ukrainian: Одеська затока, Odeska zatoka) is a part of the Black Sea between North Odesa Cape in the north and Cape Velykyi Fontan in the south.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Gulf of Odesa (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Gulf of Odesa
Пляж Відрада, Odesa Otrada

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Wikipedia: Gulf of OdesaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 46.466666666667 ° E 30.766666666667 °
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Address

Пляж Відрада
65044 Odesa, Otrada
Odesa Oblast, Ukraine
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New Vorontsov lighthouse in Odessa, Ukraine
New Vorontsov lighthouse in Odessa, Ukraine
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Nearby Places

Spartak Stadium (Odesa)
Spartak Stadium (Odesa)

Spartak Stadium is multi-functional stadium in the city of Odesa, Ukraine. It is the home ground of football club Real Pharma Odesa and RC Kredo-63. It was the temporary home ground of Chornomorets of the Ukraine Premier League while their home stadium is under reconstruction for Euro 2012. The stadium was opened in 1928 as a dedication to the 10th anniversary of the Komsomol and was considered the most modern stadium in the city at the time with seating capacity of 10,000 spectators and home to the Odesa city football team. After World War II, Kharchovyk Odesa (predecessor to Chornomorets) played in the stadium for two years (1945–46). In 1950s, it was a home to football school. In 1960s, here played FC Avtomobilist Odesa that played in lower leagues. The stadium was in decline and there were attempts in the 1970s to demolish the ground, partially related to construction of the Odesa theatre of Music Comedy. Due to protests of residents, the stadium was preserved. In the 1980s, a pervasive effort was made to reconstruct the ground. After complete reconstruction, two new stands were built instead original horseshoe-shaped and capacity was reduced to 6,000. Since Ukrainian independence in 1991, the ground has been used by the following clubs: Chornomorets (including reserve and second teams), SK Odesa, Dynamo-SKA, Palmira, Dniester. The stadium is also a venue for games involving amateur teams from Odesa and its Oblast.