Lighthouses of Ukraine: Odessa Area

Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the northwestern coast of the Black Sea became part of the independent republic of Ukraine. Except for a brief period of independence during the Russian Revolution (1917-20), Ukraine had been part of Russian or Soviet empires since 1654. However, the coastline of the Black Sea was mostly under the control of the Ottoman (Turkish) Empire until it was taken by Russia during a series of wars in the second half of the 1700s.

The Ukrainian coast is in three sections. In the west is the Bight of Odessa, named for Ukraine's largest port. In the center is the diamond shaped peninsula of Crimea (Krym in Ukainian). To the east is the Sea of Azov, connected to the rest of the Black Sea by the very narrow Kerch Strait. Ukrainian territory extends along the west and north shores of the Sea of Azov; the eastern shore is in Russia. This page includes the lighthouses of the Odessa oblast (province), the westernmost section of the Ukrainian coast.

Lighthouses in Ukraine are maintained by Gosgidrografiya, the hydrography and navigation service of the Ministry of Transport and Communications.

The Ukrainian word for a lighthouse is mayak, identical to the Russian word. As in Russia, the provinces of the country are called oblasts.

ARLHS numbers are from the ARLHS World List of Lights. UA numbers are the Ukrainian light list numbers as reported by Ukrainian Lighthouses on the Air. Admiralty numbers are from volume E of the Admiralty List of Lights & Fog Signals. U.S. NGA List numbers are from Publication 113.

General Sources
Ukrainian Lighthouses on the Air (ULA)
This web site by Ukrainian amateur radio operators has valuable information about the lights and many photos. The ULA lighthouse list is available here.
Online List of Lights - Ukraine
Photos by various photographers posted by Alex Trabas. The photos from Odessa harbor are by Douglas Cameron.
ARLHS - Lighthouses in Ukraine
The ARLHS Ukraine listing; photos contributed by Ukrainian amateur radio operators are available for many of the lighthouses.
Gosgidrografiya - Lighthouses
A dozen unlabeled photos of Ukrainian lights, posted by Gosgidrografiya.
Wikimedia - Lighthouses in Ukraine
Photos available from Wikimedia.
Russische Leuchttürme auf historischen Postkarten
Historic postcard images posted by Klaus Huelse.

Vorontsev Light
Vorontsov Light, Odessa, September 2009
photo copyright Douglas Cameron; used by permission

Novi Biliari Area Lighthouses
Note: These lights guide vessels into and around the estuary known as Velykyi Adzhalykskiy, on the north shore of the Black Sea about 40 km (25 mi) east northeast of Odessa. Biliari is a small port on the east side of the estuary, and Novi Biliari is a larger, much newer port on the west side.
Sychavskiy
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 44 m (144 ft); white light, 1.5 s on, 2.5 s off. 10 m (33 ft) skeletal tower mounted on the roof of a building. Building painted white. No photo available, although ULA has a page; a Google satellite view probably shows the lighthouse. Located above the beach about 3 km (1.8 mi) southeast of Sychavka. Site status unknown. ARLHS UKR-053; UA-0472; Admiralty E5108; NGA 17992.
Velykyi Adzhalykskiy Lower Range Front
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 47 m (154 ft); continuous green light visible only on the range line. 17 m (56 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with lantern and gallery. Tower painted black; the front of the tower is covered by a slatted daymark painted white with an orange vertical stripe. No photo available, but Google has a good satellite view. Located in a field east of the estuary, about 1 km (0.6 mi) southeast of Voronivka. Site status unknown. Admiralty E5107.3.
Velykyi Adzhalykskiy Lower Range Rear
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 69 m (226 ft); continuous green light visible only on the range line. 29 m (95 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with lantern and gallery. Tower painted black; the front of the tower is covered by a slatted daymark painted white with an orange vertical stripe. No photo available, but Google has a good satellite view. Located about 1.1 km (0.7 mi) north northeast of the front light. Site and tower probably closed, but the lighthouse should be easy to see from nearby roads. Admiralty E5107.31.
Velykyi Adzhalykskiy Upper Range Front
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 35 m (115 ft); continuous red light visible only on the range line. 18 m (59 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with lantern and gallery. Tower painted black; the front of the tower is covered by a slatted daymark painted orange. A 2008 photo of both range lights is available, and Google has a good satellite view. Located at the northern end of the estuary south of Vyzyrka. Site and tower probably closed, but the lighthouse is easy to see from nearby roads. Admiralty E5107.9.
Velykyi Adzhalykskiy Upper Range Rear
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 35 m (115 ft); continuous red light visible only on the range line. 18 m (59 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with lantern and gallery. Tower painted black; the front of the tower is covered by a slatted daymark painted orange. A 2008 photo of both range lights is available, and Google has a good satellite view. Located about 275 m (900 ft) north of the front light. Site and tower probably closed, but the lighthouse is easy to see from nearby roads. Admiralty E5107.91.
* Grigoryevskiy
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 60 m (197 ft); white flash every 3 s. 15 m (49 ft) round vase-shaped concrete tower with gallery. Upper portion painted black, lower portion white. A good 2008 photo is available, ULA has a page, and Google has a satellite view. This lighthouse marks the west side of the entrance to the estuary south of Hryhorivka. Located next to the coastal highway and about 600 m (0.4 mi) from the coast. Site appears open, tower closed. ARLHS UKR-045; UA-0446; Admiralty E5107; NGA 17988.

Odessa Lighthouses
* Luzanovskiy (Mys Severnyy Odesskiy, Odessa North Cape, Cape Lukul)
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 56 m (184 ft); white light, 1.5 s on, 3.5 s off. 10 m (33 ft) round cylindrical tower with an expanded upper section and a small lantern and gallery. Lantern and upper section painted red, lower section white. 1-story equipment house nearby. Minami Himemiya's photo is at right, another closeup is available, ULA has a page with two photos, and Google has a satellite view. Located on a promontory at the north entrance to Odessa Bay, about 16 km (10 mi) northeast of the central city. Site appears open, tower closed. ARLHS UKR-057; UA-0439; Admiralty E5106; NGA 17984.
Luzanovskiy Light
Luzanovskiy Light, April 2008
Wikimedia Creative Commons photo by Minami Himemiya
Neftyana Gavan' Range Front
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 22 m (72 ft); continuous green light, visible only on the range line. 22 m (72 ft) skeletal tower with gallery; the tower carries a black trapezoidal daymark. No photo available, but Google has a satellite view. Located on the quay of Neftyana harbor, a petroleum terminal on the north side of Odessa. Site and tower closed. Admiralty E5103; NGA 17936.
Neftyana Gavan' Range Rear
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 29 m (92 ft); continuous red light, visible only on the range line. 26 m (85 ft) skeletal tower with gallery; the tower carries a black trapezoidal daymark. No photo available, but Google has a satellite view. Located on the quay of Neftyana harbor, a petroleum terminal on the north side of Odessa. Site and tower closed. Admiralty E5103.1; NGA 17940.
Odessa Dredged Channel Range Rear
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 25 m (82 ft); continuous green light, visible only on the range line. 22 m (72 ft) skeletal tower; the tower carries triangular and rectangular daymarks painted white with a black vertical stripe. No photo available, but Google has a satellite view. Trabas has Cameron's photo of the front light, a white skeletal tower at the west end of a detached breakwater. Located in Zavods'ka Gavan', an older section of Odessa's waterfront. Site and tower closed. Admiralty E5092.1; NGA 17932.
* Stvornyy (Odessa Range Rear)
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 55 m (180 ft); continuous red light. 20 m (66 ft) white tower atop a building. Trabas has Cameron's photo. Located on the slope several blocks from the Odessa waterfront. Site open, tower closed. Admiralty E5084; NGA 17916.
Vorontsov (Reydovyy, Odessa Range Front) (3)
1954 (station established 1834). Active; focal plane 27 m (89 ft); three red flashes every 12 s. 26 m (85 ft) round cylindrical concrete tower with lantern and gallery, rising from a 1-story concrete building. The lighthouse is white; lantern painted red. Nautophone fog signal (five blasts every 60 s). Trabas has Cameron's photo also seen at the top of this page, Todor Kamenov has posted an excellent closeup, ULA has a page with two photos, ARLHS has a photo, Huelse has a postcard view, and Google has a good satellite view. Huelse also has a postcard view of the second (1888) lighthouse, which was blown up by German troops in World War II. Located at the end of a curving breakwater that protects the southeastern corner of Odessa's harbor. Accessible only by boat. Site and tower closed, but there are excellent views from cruise ships arriving in the city. ARLHS UKR-033; UA-0340; Admiralty E5082; NGA 17912.
Fontana (Odesskiy Zaliv) (3)
Date unknown (station established 1834). Active; focal plane 84 m (276 ft); three white flashes every 12 s. 27 m (89 ft) square cylindrical steel skeletal tower with triple gallery and enclosed watch room, painted with red and white horizontal bands. A photo is at right, ULA has a page with three photos, and Google has a satellite view. This is one of Ukraine's oldest light stations, and it is the traditional landfall light for Odessa. Huelse has a 1910 postcard view of the second (?) lighthouse, a cast iron skeletal with central cylinder built in 1901. Before 1901, the lighthouse was a masonry tower about 15 m (49 ft) tall, but it's not clear if this was the 1834 original. Located on Cape Fontana, a headland about 8 km (5 mi) south of downtown Odessa. Site status unknown. ARLHS UKR-018; UA-0295; Admiralty E5078; NGA 17904.
Fontana Light
Fontana Light
unattributed photo from lighthouse21v.narod.ru

Ilichevsk Lighthouses
Sukhyi Lyman (Sukhoy Liman) Range Front
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 40 m (131 ft); continuous green light visible only on the range line. Approx. 38 m (125 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with gallery. Upper half of the tower painted black, lower half white. A photo is available, and Google has a satellite view. Located at the end of a pier on the north side of Sukhoy harbor, about 4 km (2.5 mi) northwest of the Ilichevskiy lighthouse. Site and tower closed. Admiralty E5076; NGA 17892.
Sukhyi Lyman (Sukhoy Liman) Range Rear
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 51 m (167 ft); continuous white light visible only on the range line. Approx. 38 m (125 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with gallery. No photo available, but Google has a satellite view. Located in an industrial zone about 250 m (800 ft) north northwest of the front light. Site and tower closed. Admiralty E5076.1; NGA 17896.
Ilichevsk (Il'ichevskiy) South Mole
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 20 m (66 ft); red light, 4.5 s on, 4.5 s off, 1.5 s on, 1.5 s off. 18 m (59 ft) round cylindrical concrete tower with lantern and gallery, centered on a 1-story equipment building. A photo is at right, ULA has a page with two photos, a photo of the lighthouse in action is available, and Google has an indistinct satellite view. Lighthouse painted with red and white horizontal bands; lantern dome painted red, equipment building white. The lighthouse marks the entrance to an estuary that forms the harbor of Ilichevsk, an industrial town about 15 km (9 mi) south of Odessa. Site status unknown. ARLHS UKR-020; UA-0168; Admiralty E5071; NGA 17860.
Ilichevskiy Entrance (Oleksandrivka, Aleksandrouka) Range Front
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 46 m (151 ft); continuous green light. 27 m (89 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with gallery, painted black. The tower carries a large rectangular slatted daymark, painted white with a black vertical stripe on the range line. No photo available, but Google has a good satellite view. Located in an industrial area on the west side of the harbor in Ilichevskiy. Site status unknown. Admiralty E5072; NGA 17868.
Ilichevskiy Entrance (Oleksandrivka, Aleksandrouka) Range Rear
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 72 m (236 ft); continuous red light. 29 m (95 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with gallery, mounted on a concrete platform supported over a street by four piles. Tower painted black; the tower also carries a large rectangular slatted daymark, painted white with a black vertical stripe on the range line. A closeup photo is available, and Google has a good satellite view. Located 700 m (0.44 mi) west northwest of the front light. Site status unknown. Admiralty E5072.1; NGA 17872.
Ilichevsk Light
Ilichevsk South Mole Light, April 2008
Wikipedia Creative Commons photo by Minami Himemiya

South Coast Lighthouses
* Sanzijka (Sanzheyskiy)
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 35 m (115 ft); two green flashes every 15 s. 19 m (62 ft) octagonal cylindrical masonry tower with lantern and gallery. Lighthouse painted white, lantern dome green. A photo is at right, ULA has a page, and Google has a good satellite view. Located above the beach about 16 km (10 mi) northeast of the mouth of the Dnister and about 25 km (15 mi) southwest of Odessa. Site open, tower closed. ARLHS UKR-028; UA-0158; Admiralty E5068; NGA 17848.
* Tsaregradskoe Girlo Range Front
Date unknown (station established at least by 1855). Active; focal plane 23 m (75 ft); continuous green light. 21 m (69 ft) square cylindrical steel skeletal tower with gallery, painted red. The upper half of the front of the tower is covered by a slatted daymark, painted red with a white vertical stripe on the range line. ULA has a page with a photo, and Google has a satellite view. The range guides vessels through the narrow inlet in the barrier bar at the mouth of the Dnister River. Located on the waterfront at Zatoka, on the south side of the inlet. Site appears open, tower closed. ARLHS UKR-096; UA-0090; Admiralty E5060; NGA 17840.
* Tsaregradskoe Girlo Range Rear (Zatoka)
Date unknown (station established at least by 1855). Active; focal plane 34 m (112 ft); white light, 3 s on, 4.5 s off. 32 m (105 ft) square steel skeletal tower with gallery, painted red. The upper half of the front of the tower is enclosed by a large daymark, painted with red and white horizontal bands and with a white vertical stripe on the range line. ULA has a page with a photo, a 2008 photo is available, and Google has a satellite view. The range guides vessels through the narrow inlet in the barrier bar at the mouth of the Dnister River. Located on the waterfront at Zatoka, 220 m (720 ft) west of the front light and just east of the bridge over the inlet. Site appears open, tower closed. ARLHS UKR-097; UA-0091; Admiralty E5060.1; NGA 17844.
* Budaki
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 38 m (125 ft); white flash every 5 s. 15 m (49 ft) square cylindrical skeletal tower with a small lantern and gallery; the seaward face of the tower carries a slatted daymark painted black with a white vertical stripe. ULA has a page with two photos, a 2008 photo is available, and Google has a satellite view. This lighthouse stands on one of the highest points of the long, sandy coastline stretching southwest from the mouth of the Dnister River. Located above the beach at Budaki, about 30 km (19 mi) south of Bilhorod-Dnistrovsky. Site appears open, tower closed. ARLHS UKR-084; UA-0059; Admiralty E5056; NGA 17828.

Sanzijka Light, July 2009
Wikimedia public domain photo by Dinamik
* Lebedivka (Burnas)
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 25 m (82 ft); red light, 1 s on, 1 s off. 13 m (43 ft) tower, described by NGA as a "white stone structure on yellow building." No photo available. Lebedivka, formerly called Bad Burnas, is a seaside resort in far southwestern Ukraine. Located at the northern end of Lebedivka. Site status unknown, but probably open, tower status unknown. Admiralty E5054; NGA 17824.

* Ozero Sagany (Shagany)
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 20 m (66 ft); white flash every 3 s. 16 m (52 ft) round cylindrical concrete tower with gallery and a prominent topmark in the form of two inverted cones. Tower painted red, topmarks black. A. Serduchenko has a photo, and Google has a satellite view. Located on the barrier beach at the southern end of the Sagany lagoon. Admiralty E5053.6; NGA 17820.

Danube Delta Lighthouse
Girlo Prorva
Date unknown. Active; focal plane 29 m (95 ft); white light, 2 s on, 1 s off, 2 s on, 4 s off. 28 m (92 ft) square pyramidal skeletal tower mounted on a concrete base. Lighthouse painted green. ULA has a page for the light, but no photo. Google has a satellite view that appears to show a pyramidal tower, but it is on the west side of the channel instead of the east side as described by NGA. We need more information on this site. Located about 3 km (2 mi) south of the entrance to the Prorva branch, the northernmost mouth of the Danube. Site status unknown. ARLHS UKR-0041; UA-023; Admiralty E5041; NGA 17788.

Ostrov Zminyii (Snake Island) Lighthouse
Zmiinyi (Zmiyinyy, Zmeiny, Serpilor, Snake Island)
1846. Active; focal plane 54 m (177 ft); white light, 1.5 s on, 3 s off. 18 m (59 ft) octagonal brick tower with lantern and gallery, attached to a 1-story brick keeper's house. Lighthouse painted white; the lantern is gray metallic. A photo is at right, Anatoliy Martynov's photo is at right, ULA has several photos, another closeup photo and a third photo are available, and Google has a distant satellite view of the location. Snake Island is a small limestone island in the Black Sea about 35 km (22 mi) east of the Danube Delta. The island was part of the Ottoman Empire until the Russo-Turkish War of 1828-29, when it was occupied by Russia. The lighthouse was built under Russian control, but in 1856 the island returned to Turkey following the Crimean War. After the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78 the island was assigned to Romania. In 1948 it was occupied by Soviet troops, an annexation Romania has never accepted. The island was inherited by Ukraine in 1991, with Romania still protesting. Under a 1997 treaty between Ukraine and Romania, Ukraine agreed to demilitarize the island, and it is now occupied by a scientific station and civilian border guards. The lighthouse is located at the highest point of the island. Accessible only by boat. Site and tower closed (permission is required for visits). ARLHS UKR-050; UA-0001; Admiralty E5036; NGA 17772.
Zmiinyi Light
Zmiinyi Light, March 2007
photo copyright Anatoliy Martynov; permission requested

Information available on lost lighthouses:

Notable faux lighthouses:

Adjoining pages: East: Mykolaiv Area | South: Romania

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Posted February 19, 2007. Checked and revised October 3, 2011. Lighthouses: 26. Site copyright 2011 Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.