Bukovel

Bukovel

General view
Nearest city Yaremche
Coordinates 48°21′37″N 24°23′32″E / 48.36028°N 24.39222°E / 48.36028; 24.39222Coordinates: 48°21′37″N 24°23′32″E / 48.36028°N 24.39222°E / 48.36028; 24.39222
Vertical 472 m (1,549 ft)
Top elevation 1,372 m (4,501 ft)
Base elevation 900 m (3,000 ft)
Skiable area 220 ha (540 acres)
Runs 63
- 13 - Easiest
- 36 - More Difficult
- 7 - Expert
Longest run 2,106 m (6,909 ft)
Lift system 16 lifts
Lift capacity 30,000 passengers/hr
Website bukovel.com

Bukovel (Bukovel) — is the largest ski resort in Eastern Europe situated in Ukraine, in the Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast (province) of western Ukraine. The resort is located almost on the ridge-lines of the Carpathian Mountains at elevation of 900 m (3,000 ft) above the sea level near the village of Polianytsia (Yaremche municipality) (about a half mile away). It is one of the most popular ski resorts in the Ukrainian Carpathian Mountains and is situated 30 km (19 mi) southwest of the city of Yaremche. In 2012 the Bukovel was named the fastest-growing world ski resort.

History

The resort was pioneered in 2000 by a joint venture of Scorzonera Ltd. and Horizont AL as an all-year-round tourist and recreational complex. The research for potential ski fields and cableways of the first stage was conducted in cooperation with Plan-Alp, Austria, and Ecosign, Canada, who also finalized the master plan for the resort. By late 2001, a first 691-meter ski lift was launched at the Northern slope of Mountain Bukovel along with the projected chairlift ropeway at the Bukovel's north-western slope. The project was finished in Sept.-Oct. 2002 as a 1000-metre ropeway. In 2003 a second slope, 2A ski run with a chairlift was introduced, and in 2004 a 7A ski run with a surface lift started its operation. With mere 48,000 visitors in 2003, Bukovel welcomed 206,000 tourists in 2005-2006, 400,000 in 2006-2007 and 850,000 visitors in 2008-2009. The 2010-2011 winter season recorded 1,200,000 day visits with foreigners amounting to 8-10% of all visitors. In 2012 the Bukovel was named the fastest-growing ski resort worldwide.

Ski Resort

Ski runs

Bukovel currently boasts 16 ski lifts with roughly 50 km (31 mi) of pistes. There are 61 pistes sections of which 12 are Blue(beginners), 41 red (intermediates) and 8 are Black (experts). The longest piste is 5G at 2,106 m (6,909 ft). There are 11×4-person chair lifts, 1×3-person chair lift, 1×2-person chair lift and 1×T-bar. The top elevation is on Mount Dovha at 1372 meters and the base elevation is 900 meters above sea level, for a total vertical drop of 472 meters.[1]

There are five distinct mountains in the area:

On the other side of mount Babyn Pohar is a nature preserve "Gorgany". Bukovel's ski season depends on climatic factors and is usually around the beginning of December to mid-April. Night skiing is available from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. Bukovel is growing rapidly, and new equipment and runs are being added each year.

Recreation

Four-seat lifts
Hotels
Snow Park
Small lake with ecological heating system
Larhe Bukovel's lake

The resort contains all facilities for sports, business, leisure and health

Accommodations

Entertainment

Health Facilities

Starting 2008 the Bukovel is developing as a health and balneotherapy centre for people with problems with musculoskeletal, digestive and urinary systems [as attested by the Odessa Institute for Baleotherapy and Resorts. The Bukovel has a free-of-charge pump room to drink mineral water. The resort is also known for its baths of mineral water and herb extracts.

The Largest Artificial Lake in Ukraine

In the summer of 2014 Bukovel opened the largest artificial lake in Ukraine.

- area of 6,8 hectares

- dimensions of 750 x 140 m

- the beach stretching for 2 km

- The depth up to 15 m

The lake was the most ambitious resort project worth almost 150 mln UAH

The lake shores have arranged deckchairs, recreation areas and beach cafes. And on the lake itself there is the whole range of water activities:

For the safety of tourists at all amusements are experienced instructors, accredited lifeguards on the beach. The areas for swimming and water activities are delineated. The lake water is crystal clear and warm up to 20-22 degrees. Among tourists lake has been called "Carpathian Sea"

Ski runs and lifts

Snow Canon

Bukovel comprises facilities situated at five mountains: Dovha (1372 m), Bukovel (1127 m), Bulchinekha (1455 m), Babiy Pohar (1180 m), and Chorna Kleva (1241 m) thus giving it 60 km of ski runs of various difficulty levels. All runs provide space for up to 15,000 skiers to ski simultaneously. The runs are on slopes with grass basis, equipped with snow cannons and protected from direct sun light. Three of the runs are lighted to provide skiing at night. During the season the resort has 16 ski lifts capable in operation to service 34700 people an hour. There are 63 ski runs in total, from 300 to 2350 m long and are classified as blue, red and black. Their height drop is 40 to 285 m. The resort also has a professional giant slalom run and a mogul run 1A.

Ski resort has 16 ski lifts, including:

Besides, there are several surface lifts for beginners (rope tows and magic carpet).

Bukovel Ski School Instructors

Bukovel Ski School

Bukovel Ski School was set up in 2001 by the Bukovel Ski Resort and ski and snowboarding coaches. It trains people of all ages, as well as provides training grounds for professional sportsmen. The School promotes skiing and health programmes. During each season the Bukovel Ski Schools organizes over 30 ski and snowboarding events for children, amateurs, professional sportsmen and coaches. In the summertime the School holds a children's health and sports camp programmes and other leisure events for Bukovel's visitors.

The Bukovel Ski School co-sponsors several large-scale charity social projects among children, junior sportsmen and students of boarding schools to promote skiing. The School cooperates with the Ukraine's Ministry for Education and Science and Ministry for Youth and Sports, Ski Federation of Ukraine and Ukraine's National Olympic Committee.

All coaches have qualified under ISIA, international standards for skiing and snowboarding instructors.


Bukovel Bike Park

Bike Park at the Bukovel Ski Resort has routes for various mountain biking disciplines (MTB):

The bike routes run for 46.7 km with 4.7 km for speed downhill biking. The Bike Park has 10 routes of various difficulty and length, from general tours to DownHill and SuperD.

Over 6,000 visitors came to the Park each season.

The Bukovel Bike Park organizes and hosts a number of biking events yearly, including the Bukovel Grand Bike Fest, Ukraine's National DownHill Championship and Bukovel DH.[2]

Winter Olympic ambitions

The local government announced in 2006 that the Bukovel ski and snowboard resort is expanding to 262 acres (1.06 km2) in anticipation of Ukraine bidding to host the 2018 Winter Olympics. The additional land will be used for the construction of several new ski lifts and service projects. Previously, the land was a government-managed forest preserve area.[3] Bukovel has also plans to build an Olympic winter stadium in preparation for a possible bid.[4] In 2008 the head of the Ukrainian NOC (National Olympic Committee), Serhiy Bubka, announced that even though Bukovel is a world-class ski-resort the talks of hosting the Olympic games are ridiculous as the town does not have the required infrastructure to host such a big event. The deadline for the Olympic bid was on October 15, 2009 for which Bukovel was not prepared.

In early months of 2010 the administration of Bukovel was involved in the government scandal around the dismissal of the director of the Gorgany Natural Preserve. Vasyl Kisliak was fired by the Minister for protection of the natural environment Filipchuk "for a low level of organizational skills" as the administration of Bukovel could not find a middle ground and cooperation with the director. The cornerstone of the argument became an infrastructural development of the resort and particularly a road that would connect Bukovel with Yaremche.[5]

In 2014 Ukraine dropped its 2022 Olympic bid for which it was considered a front runner along with Norway due to the War in Donbass.[6]

Gallery

References

External links

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