Ankitt Patel
Reviews 1

At the foot of the Potemkin Stairs you can allow a few minutes to poke around the passenger jetty and watch the Black Sea. The city owes its 19th-century success to the fact that it s warm-water port, so doesn t freeze in winter, a vital characteristic in that period. Over the last 200 years the seafront has seen some dramatic moments in the Crimean War and the mass departure of Jews during a succession of pogroms at the end of the 19th century. On the jetty behind the terminal building there s a statue depicting a fisherman s wife holding a child and looking out to sea, along with a small maritime museum and a couple of seafood restaurants.

OKIRIAN
Reviews 1

Port and Vorontsovsky lighthouse-the main picture of Odessa from the sea-is perfectly visible from the sea terminal. It works round the clock: life is boiling, cranes are buzzing, containers are bogging down, trains are buzzing, wagons are pounding-all this creates a cheerful mood for everyone who lives near (Lidersovskiy-Uspensky-Marazlievskaya-Greek). And at night, these sounds are especially adorable - give the feeling that "you are not alone" and lull. Since the childhood I remember these sounds)))

Ihor Y.
Reviews 1

On August 22 (September 2), 1794, after the prayer and consecration of the construction sites and the coastal part of the port, the workers piled two piles of two future malls, the Great and the Lesser, which laid the foundation for the city's biography. Construction of the port was supervised by the construction committee "Expedition for the construction of the harbor and the city."