Jump to content

Sergey Dyagilev (ship)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 14:30, 6 January 2020 (Task 15: language icon template(s) replaced (7×);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Sergey Dyagilev at Northern River Terminal in Moscow on 22 September 2011
History
Name
  • Novikov-Priboy (1983–2011)
  • Sergey Dyagilev (2011–2017)
Owner1996–2017: Doninturflot[2]
OperatorDoninturflot
Port of registry
RouteMoscowSaint Petersburg
BuilderVEB Elbewerften Boizenburg/Roßlau, Boizenburg, East Germany
Yard number380[1]
CompletedOctober 1983
In service1983
Identification
StatusIn service
General characteristics
Class and typeDmitriy Furmanov-class river cruise ship
Tonnage
Displacement3,853 tons;[1]
Length129.0 m (423.2 ft)[1][3]
Beam16.7 m (55 ft)[1][4]
Draught2.88 m (9.4 ft)[1]
Decks5 (4 passenger accessible)
Installed power
  • 3 × 6ЧРН36/45 (ЭГ70-5)
  • 2,205 kilowatts (2,957 hp)[1][3]
Propulsion3 propellers[1]
Speed25.5 km/h (15.8 mph; 13.8 kn)
Capacity284 passengers[1]
Crew92[1]

The Sergey Dyagilev (Russian: Сергей Дягилев) is a Dmitriy Furmanov-class (project 302, BiFa129M) Soviet/Russian river cruise ship, cruising in the VolgaNeva basin. The ship was built by VEB Elbewerften Boizenburg/Roßlau at their shipyard in Boizenburg, East Germany, and entered service in 1983. The ship is named after Russian art critic, patron, ballet impresario and founder of the Ballets Russes Sergei Diaghilev.

Her home port is currently Rostov-on-Don. Captain of the Sergey Dyagilev (2011) is Jury Makaryev.[6]

Features

The ship has two restaurants,[7] two bars, two souvenir shops,[8] conference hall, sauna and library.[9]

See also

References

External links