Login

 

Forgot password?
submarines shipbuilding Black Sea Fleet exercise Pacific Fleet Russian Navy Northern Fleet strategy cooperation Ukraine visits Russia piracy missiles trials Sevastopol history Sevmash presence contracts drills Baltic Fleet industry incident anti-piracy shipyards Gulf of Aden frigate training Somalia India developments reforms opinion Borei policy procurements Russia - India aircraft carrier Crimea arms exports USA St. Petersburg tests France financing Bulava Yury Dolgoruky Serdiukov US Navy Mediterranean cruise Zvezdochka NATO innovations Indian Navy United Shipbuilding Corporation Medvedev Arctic agreements commission Admiralteyskie Verfi Admiral Gorshkov Vladivostok Mistral accident hijacking corvettes overhaul Admiral Kuznetsov Russia - France anniversary Rosoboronexport Vysotsky ceremony event Yantar Severomorsk defense order negotiations aircraft conflict China deployment naval aviation investigations Black Sea Putin Varyag coast guard Vikramaditya Novorossiysk landing craft Far East marines crime meeting Severnaya Verf scandals memorials traditions Syria statistics Japan South Korea escort Yasen Neustrashimy tenders Admiral Chabanenko Marshal Shaposhnikov convoys Ukrainian Navy problems Severodvinsk Chirkov reinforcement tension firings tragedy technology hostages Almaz provocation Moskva Caspian Flotilla frontier service Baltic Sea search and rescue upgrade court keel laying rumors Dmitry Donskoy Turkey shipwreck death Kaliningrad World War II Petr Veliky Admiral Panteleyev Atalanta helicopters Kilo class Admiral Vinogradov Norway Rubin patrols Russia-Norway launching
Search
Our friends russian navy weapons world sailing ships
 
Tell a friend Print version

Nuclear sub can be museum

07/13/2010 
Text: BarentsObserver.com
Photo: K-3 – Leninski Komsomol. deepstorm.ru
The Soviet Union's first nuclear submarine, K-3 – Leninski Komsomol, can be placed in the central harbor of Murmansk and serve as a museum.

It is the administration of Murmansk Oblast that has taken the initiative to preserve the first nuclear power submarine and re-build it to a museum open for the public. K-3 is currently laidup at the Nerpa shipyard northwest of Murmansk on the Kola Peninsula.

The plan is to tow the submarine to the central harbor of Murmansk and place it next to the icebreaker Lenin that today serves as a museum for the nuclear powered icebreaker fleet. Lenin was the world's first nuclear powered civilian surface vessel.

K-3, Leninski Komsomol was delivered to the Soviet northern fleet in December 1958. It was then based in Zapadnaya Litsa on the coast of the Kola Peninsula. The submarine was later on re-located to the Gremikha naval base where it was based until it was taken out of operation in the 80ties.

According to estimates made by the Nerpa naval yard, it will cost some 500 million rubles to convert the submarine into a museum, reports newsland.ru.

Back to the news list