More features:
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Driving in Odesa
The condition of most roads in Ukraine is basically wretched, especially after the winter thaw. Another problem is the decrepit traffic lights....
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10 reasons to visit Odesa
The following is a list submitted by Odesa’s flamboyant mayor Eduard Gurvits. Feel free to submit your own list or comment on the mayor’s take....
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Using a telephone
Fixed line telephoneOdesa has two different types of fixed line numbers – one type has six digits and the other has seven....
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Contact us
Questions and suggestions should be sent to us at:Odesa In Your PocketNeolitas-KIS Ltd.odesa@inyourpocket....
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Public transport
Trams, Trolleybuses and BusesThese are favoured by schoolchildren, the working class and babushkas and dedushkas....
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Odesa In Your Pocket in iPaper
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City Jewels
If you only have time to visit one museum in Odesa, Western and Eastern Art Museum is the one. Paintings and sculptures by Michelangelo, Peter Paul Rubens, David Teniers, Sebastian del Piombo, Merisi da Caravaggio, Frans Hals and other masters are on display....
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Cosmopolitan Odessa
From its founding in 1794 until the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, Odesa was Eastern Europe’s melting pot....
Odesa Underground

Beneath Odesa lies an incredible labyrinth known as the catacombs. In the early 19th Century, city developers discovered that the plentiful limestone, just meters below, was perfect for construction. Many of Odesa’s famous architectural monuments are built of bricks cut from this quarried stone; the unintended result was one of the world’s largest networks of tunnels.
Unlike the catacombs of Paris and Rome, the only skulls and bones entombed in Odesa’s catacombs are those of the crazy-brave miners, smugglers, partisans and spelunkers who were unlucky enough to lose their way in this 2,500 km long maze.
The only authorized entrance is located in the small village of Nerubayske, 12 km from Odesa’s centre. The Museum of Partisan Glory offers a small yet fascinating glimpse into this vast underground world and is a fitting tribute to the courageous Soviet partisans who lived and staged guerrilla attacks from this sanctuary against Nazi occupiers. You’ll need to hire a guide; they’re the only ones with keys to the entrance. The guide services listed below provide excursions in English and Russian and can arrange transportation to and from Nerubayske.