Discover the best top things to do in Sevastopol Municipality, Crimea including 35 Battery Museum, Cape Fiolent, Temple of The Sun, Military History Museum of Fortifications Balaklava Underground Museum Complex, The State Museum-Preserve Tauric Chersonese, Balaklava Bay, Underground Sevastopol.
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4.5 based on 1,019 reviews
4.5 based on 501 reviews
I visited it together with my wife in the middle of April. We circled around Balaklava to see places where battles of the Crimean War had unrolled so it was only natural to go there as it had been in that town where the Aliies' headquarters had been situated. This is an absolutely marvellous place. Russia, having retaken Crimea from Ukraine six years ago, started intensive overhaul of the peninsula's infrastructure and Balaclava is no exception. Right before our visit Moscow announced that the town would be turned into a state-of-the-art yachting center which presupposes reconstruction of urban water and wastewater utilities as well as energy networks. This is great news since Ukraine didn't lift a finger to even do some maintenance works so city's waste mostly pours right into the bay. In the nearest future, however, Balaklava is doomed to get suffocated in hordes of tourists and flocks of vehicles in high season. Parking there is a challenge even in spring so don't even try to penetrate it in your car in summer - complete waste of time. Anyhow, if you're lucky, awesome views, a cozy waterfront, a spellbinding bay and breathtaking landscapes opening from the seaside will more than compensate your efforts. So, inhale, take a boat ride and enjoy this peaceful piece of littoral nature! Do mind, however, that that yachting center construction will inevitably albeit temporarily strip Balaclava off part of its charm and increase the mess.
4.5 based on 68 reviews
Museum Underground Sevastopol does not simply help you immerse into the history of the Cold War and understand the dangers of the nuclear weapons for the civilian population; it tells a true story about the possibilities the humans have to survive when living in a confined space and lacking all the basic resources. In the context today’s world struck down with coronavirus, this story is turning out to be particularly relevant and it is especially popular among our visitors. As it happens, a flu stole the spotlight from the nuclear threat even though the latter didn’t go anywhere. When the museum was created, no one thought for a second that it is this subject that will be popular with the visitors. However, it so happens that Underground Sevastopol is now the only accessible place in the city and in the country where everyone may not simply learn but understand what it means to survive under the conditions of severe restrictions.
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