
The Saimaa Canal.
The 'Saimaa Canal' (; ; ) is a
transportation canal that connects lake
Saimaa with the
Gulf of Finland near
Vyborg,
Russia. The canal was built from 1845 to 1856 and opened on
September 7,
1856 (August 26
OS).
It was overhauled and widened in 1963-1968.
A system of inland waterways and canals in the 120 interconnected lakes of the south-central and south-east part of Finland (
Finnish Lakeland) are reached through the canal. The length of deep channels in Lake Saimaa ''(with an authorised draught of 4.2 m or 14 feet)'' is 814 km (506 miles). The deep channels extend to
Kuopio in Central Finland.
Layout
The canal begins near
Lappeenranta,
Finland () and ends in
Vyborg,
Russia (), connecting Lake
Saimaa and the
Vyborg Bay. On the way, it connects
Lake Nuijamaa, on the Finnish-Russian border, and three smaller lakes in Russia.
Dimensions
★ Length — 42.9
kilometers (26.7 miles) (19.6
km (12.2 miles) — Russian part of the canal, 23.3
km (14.5 miles) — in Finland)
★ Width — from 34 to 55
meters (110 to 180 feet)
★ Total lift from the
Gulf of Finland to Lake
Saimaa — 75.7
meters (248 feet)
★ The maximum dimensions allowed for a ship transiting the canal are:
★
★ Length: 82.0
meters (269
ft)
★
★
Beam (width): 12.2
meters (40
ft)
★
★
Draft 4.35
meters (14.2
ft)
★
★ Height of mast 24.5
meters (80.3
ft)
Locks
There are three locks in the Finnish part of the canal
★ Mälkiä
★ Mustola
★ Soskua
Other five locks situated on the Russian side of the border:
★ Pälli ()
★ Ilistoe ()
★ Cvetotchnoe ()
★ Iskrovka ()
★ Brusnitchnoe ()
Mälkiä Lock has highest lift — 12.4
meters (41 feet), Cvetotchnoe Lock has the lowest — 5.5
meters (18 feet).
Bridges
The canal crosses
★ 12 motor vehicles bridges:
★
★ 6 of them in Finland – 3 movable and 3 immovable
★
★ other 6 in Russia - 4 movable and 2 immovable
★ 2 railroad bridges (one on the each side of the border), both of them are immovable.
History
The canal, inaugurated in
1856, was built between the cities of
Lappeenranta and
Viipuri (now Vyborg, Russia), both of them then in the autonomous
Grand Duchy of Finland in
Russian Empire.
In the
Moscow Peace Treaty of 1940, the
Karelian Isthmus and the city of Vyborg were ceded to the
Soviet Union, thus effectively splitting the canal in half and ending all traffic.
A treaty in
1963 leased the
Russian part of the canal area and the island of
Malyj Vysotskij (Ravansaari) to Finland for fifty years. A new deeper
canal was constructed by the Finns and it opened to traffic in
1968. The length of the canal itself is 42.9 km (26.7 miles).
Negotiations to extend the lease time beyond 2013 are
presently underway between Finland and Russia.
External links
★
Finnish Maritime Administration - Saimaa Canal