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Nakhodka

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Nakhodka (English)
Находка (Russian)

Nakhodka seen from the west

Location of Primorsky Krai on the map of Russia
Nakhodka is located in Primorsky Krai
Nakhodka
Location of Nakhodka on the map of Primorsky Krai
Coordinates
42°49′N 132°53′E / 42.817°N 132.883°E / 42.817; 132.883Coordinates: 42°49′N 132°53′E / 42.817°N 132.883°E / 42.817; 132.883
Coat of Arms Flag
Administrative status
Federal subject
In jurisdiction of
Administrative center of
Primorsky Krai
Primorsky Krai
n/a
Local self-government
Charter n/a
Municipal status Urban okrug
Mayor Oleg Kolyadin
Representative Body n/a
Area
Area n/a
Population
2002 Census
- Rank
- Density
148,826 inhabitants
n/a
n/a
Events
Founded 1940
Town status 1950
Other information
Postal code 692900–692955
Dialing code +7 4236
Official website
http://www.nakhodka-city.ru

Nakhodka (Russian: Нахо́дка) is a port city in Primorsky Krai, Russia. The city had 148,826 inhabitants as of the 2002 Census, down from 160,056 recorded in the 1989 Census. During the years from 1950 until 1991, when the nearby large port of Vladivostok was closed to foreigners and foreign shipping, Nakhodka became the primary deep water port in the Russian Far East.

Contents

[edit] Geography

Nakhodka is one of the most easterly large cities in Russia, on the Nakhodka Bay of the Sea of Japan, around 9000km from Moscow and about 85km east of Vladivostok. The nearest other town is Partizansk, around 50km to the north.

[edit] History

Nakhodka Bay, around which the city is organized, was discovered in 1859 by the Russian corvette "Amerika", which sought shelter in the bay during a storm. In honour of this occasion, the ice-free and relatively calm bay was named Nakhodka, which in Russian means discovery or "lucky find".

Until the 20th century the area around the bay remained uninhabited, with the first settlement a small fishing village founded in 1907. When the Soviet government decided to build a harbour in the area in 1930s, a number of small settlements were founded, which were merged as a work settlement in 1940s. In 1950 the town, now with around 28,000 residents, was given town status.

In the early 1950s, Soviet authorities decided to close Vladivostok to foreign shipping and use it as the base for the Soviet Pacific Fleet. Nakhodka became both the eastern terminus for passenger trains on the Trans-Siberian Railway and only port in the Russian Far East which was open to foreigners, these factors stimulating the town's rapid growth. Many of the buildings in the city date from the 1950s, when Japanese prisoners of war were used as forced-labour to build housing for the incoming port workers. The city's heyday was apparently in the 1970s and 1980s, when it was very well-cared for due to its visibility to foreigners.

[edit] Economy and Infrastructure

The city's economy, based mostly around the port and port-related activity such as fish processing and canning, has suffered since 1991 as Vladivostok was opened to foreign activity again. Local industry also took a hit during the 1998 Russian financial crisis. However, Nakhodka has been declared a "Free economic zone", and the governments in both Moscow (federal) and Vladivostok (regional) have seemed interested in opening the city further to foreign investment.

Nakhodka is also an important transport junction where goods from Japan are transferred from ships onto the Russian railway system.

[edit] Sport

FC Okean Nakhodka is the only professional sport club in the city. It spent the 1992 and 1993 seasons in the Russian Premier League. It is also the home town of soccer player Viktor Fayzulin.

[edit] Sister cities

Nakhodka has the following sister city relationships:

[edit] External links

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