Lenin Square

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 Our city - Donetsk

   
 

About our company

 
Lokomotiv Stadium

 

 

The main street - Artem street

 

 Drama Theatre

 

Library


Donetsk, also spelt Doneck, formerly (until 1924) Yuzovka, or (1924-61) Stalino, city and administrative centre of Donetsk oblast (province), south-eastern Ukraine, on the headwaters of the Kalmius river.

Sergey Bubka - the world champion in pole vaults - was born in DonetskIn 1872 an ironworks was founded there by a Welshman named John Hughes (from whom the town's pre-Revolutionary name Yuzovka was derived), to produce iron rail for the growing Russian rail network. Later steel rails were made. The plant used coal from the immediate vicinity, and both coal mining and steel making developed rapidly. By 1914 there were 4 metallurgical plants, 10 coal pits, and a population of about 50,000.

 After the October revolution (1917), Yuzovka was renamed Stalino and in 1961, Donetsk.

Heavy destruction in World War II led to post-war modernization and an increase in the scale of industry. Subsequent growth has been rapid and sustained. There are now more than 40 Coal pits within the town limits. A major integrated coking, iron-smelting and steel-making plant makes modern Donetsk one of the largest metallurgical centers of the Ukraine. Coke by-products are the basis of a chemical industry producing plastics. There are several heavy-engineering works, which produce, in the main, mining equipment. Refrigerators are manufactured and there are other light industries.

Pushkin Boulevard

The necessity of avoiding areas subject to subsidence caused by mining has led to a patchy development of the densely built-up and factory areas, and open spaces over the extensive area of the towns administrative limits (162 square miles or 420 square km). The principal street, from the railway station to the steelworks is 5.5 miles (9km) long, with the main shops, hotels and administrative buildings.

There is a university and a polytechnic, medical and trade institutes, and more than 30 scientific research establishments, including a branch of the Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. Cultural amenities include several theatres and a philharmonic hall. Pop. (1993 est.) 1,121,000.

 

Kalmius-river

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