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Vinnytsia

City and administrative center of Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine

Vinnytsia

City and administrative center of Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine

FieldValue
official_nameVinnytsia
native_nameВінниця
nicknamePearl of Podilia
settlement_typeCity
image_skyline{{multiple image
borderinfobox
total_width270
image_styleborder:1
perrow1/3/2
caption_aligncenter
image1Веселка над Домініканським монастирем P1730263 Вінниця.jpg
image2Монастир домініканців P1120184.jpgBaroque Transfiguration Cathedral
image3Вінниця Водонапірна вежа 4.jpgWater tower
image4Костел Святої Діви Марії Ангельської (Вінниця) P1100782.jpgBaroque Capuchin Church
image5Микільська церква (Вінниця) P 20190713 183412.jpgSaint Nicholas Church
image6Театр ім. М. К. Садовського P1100746.jpgAcademic Music-Drama Theater
caption1View of the city
caption2Transfiguration Cathedral
caption3Water tower
caption4Capuchin Church
caption5Saint Nicholas Church
caption6Academic Music-Drama Theater
image_flagFlag of Vinnycia.svg
image_shieldCoat of arms of Vinnytsia.svg
pushpin_mapUkraine Vinnytsia Oblast#Ukraine
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Oblast
subdivision_name1Vinnytsia Oblast
subdivision_type2Raion
subdivision_name2Vinnytsia Raion
subdivision_type3Hromada
subdivision_name3Vinnytsia urban hromada
established_titleFounded
established_date1363
leader_titleMayor
leader_name
leader_partyUkrainian Strategy of Groysman
area_total_km2140
population_as_of2025
population_total356,379
population_metro664,2
population_density_km23290
coordinates
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code21000-
area_code+380 432
blank_info_sec1Birmingham, Kielce, Peterborough, Bursa, Panevėžys, Bat Yam, Karlsruhe, Nancy
blank_name_sec1Sister cities
website
timezone1UTC+2
timezone2UTC+3

Vinnytsia ( ; , ) is a city in west-central Ukraine, located on the banks of the Southern Bug. It serves as the administrative center of Vinnytsia Oblast in Ukraine. It is the largest city in the historic region of Podillia. It also serves as the administrative center of Vinnytsia Raion, one of the six raions of Vinnytsia Oblast. It has a population of 356,379 (2025).

The city's roots date back to the Middle Ages. It was under Lithuanian and Polish control for centuries. From 1653 to 1667, Vinnytsia was a regimental city of the Hetman state, and in 1793, it was ceded to the Russian Empire. During the 1930s and early 1940s, the city was the site of massacres, first during Stalin's purges and then during the Holocaust in Ukraine and the Nazi occupation. A Cold War–era airbase was located near the city. Currently, Vinnytsia is developing as one of the most comfortable cities for life in independent Ukraine.

Name

  • National, BGN/PCGN: Vinnytsia
  • ALA-LC: Vinnytsi͡a
  • Scholarly: Vinnycja
  • DSTU 9112:2021: Vinnycja The name of Vinnytsia appeared for the first time in 1363. It is assumed that the name is derived from the Proto-Slavic word "" (вѣно), meaning "a bride price." This name can be explained by the fact that Vinnytsia and the surrounding land were captured by Lithuanian Duke Algirdas in the 14th century, and then, they were given to his nephews.

In addition to the Ukrainian Вінниця (), in other languages of the region, the name of the city is , , , , and . English sources used the Russian-derived Vinnitsa from the early 19th century until the 1990s and Winnica or Winnicza (from Polish) before that, reflecting the ultimate political authorities of those respective eras. According to the official transcription of DSTU 9112:2021 (1 April 2022), Вінниця should be rendered as Vinnycja in the Ukrainian Latin alphabet.

Geography

Location

Vinnytsia is located about 260 km southwest of the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, 429 km north-northwest of the Black Sea port city of Odesa, and 369 km east of Lviv.

It is the administrative center of Vinnytsia Oblast (province), as well as the administrative center of the surrounding Vinnytsia Raion within the oblast. The city itself is directly subordinated to the oblast.

Climate

The city has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Köppen: Dfb).

A long-lasting warm summer with a sufficient quantity of moisture and a comparatively short winter is characteristic of Vinnytsia. The average temperature in January is -5.8 °C and 18.3 °C in July. The average annual precipitation is 638 mm.

Over the course of a year there are around 6–9 days when snowstorms occur, 37–60 days when mists occur during the cold period, and 3–5 days when thunderstorms with hail occur.

| Jan record high C = 15.3 | Feb record high C = 17.3 | Mar record high C = 26.7 | Apr record high C = 29.4 | May record high C = 32.2 | Jun record high C = 35.0 | Jul record high C = 39.2 | Aug record high C = 38.2 | Sep record high C = 36.5 | Oct record high C = 28.6 | Nov record high C = 19.9 | Dec record high C = 15.4 | year record high C = | Jan record low C = -35.5 | Feb record low C = -33.6 | Mar record low C = -24.2 | Apr record low C = -12.7 | May record low C = -2.8 | Jun record low C = 2.5 | Jul record low C = 5.2 | Aug record low C = 1.5 | Sep record low C = -4.5 | Oct record low C = -11.4 | Nov record low C = -24.6 | Dec record low C = -27.2 | year record low C = -35.5 | Jan snow depth cm = 12 | Feb snow depth cm = 12 | Mar snow depth cm = 9 | Apr snow depth cm = 0 | May snow depth cm = 0 | Jun snow depth cm = 0 | Jul snow depth cm = 0 | Aug snow depth cm = 0 | Sep snow depth cm = 0 | Oct snow depth cm = 0 | Nov snow depth cm = 1 | Dec snow depth cm = 6 | year snow depth cm = 12 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191213142953/http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/climate/33562.htm | archive-date = 13 December 2019 | access-date = 8 November 2021

Ecology and climate change

On 28 January 2022, Vinnytsia City Council announced Vinnytsia Green Deal by signing the Declaration and approving the Roadmap of measures for the implementation of its principles and approaches within the community.

History

Early history

Chorągiew królewska króla Zygmunta III Wazy.svg Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth 1569–1649

Flag of the Cossack Hetmanate.svg Cossack Hetmanate 1649-1667

Chorągiew królewska króla Zygmunta III Wazy.svg Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth 1667-1672

Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1517-1844).svg Ottoman Empire 1672–1699

Royal Banner of Stanisław II of Poland.svg Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth 1699–1793

Russian Empire 1793–1917

RUS Russian Republic 1917

Ukrainian People's Republic 1917–1918

Ukrainian State 1918

Ukrainian People's Republic 1918–1919

Ukrainian SSR Soviet Ukraine 1919

Ukrainian People's Republic 1919–1920

Ukrainian SSR Soviet Ukraine 1920–1922

Soviet Union 1922–1941

Nazi Germany 1941–1944 (occupation)

Soviet Union 1944–1991

Ukraine 1991–present

Vinnytsia, known in Polish as Winnica, has been an important trade and political center since the fourteenth century, when Fyodor Koriatovych, the nephew of the Lithuanian Duke Algirdas, built a fortress (1363) against Tatar raiders on the banks of the Southern Bug. The original settlement was built and populated by Aleksander Hrehorovicz Jelec, a hetman under Lithuanian Prince Švitrigaila. Aleksander Jelec built the fort, which he commanded as starosta afterwards.

In the 15th century, Lithuanian Grand Duke Alexander Jagiellon granted Vinnytsia Magdeburg city rights. In 1566, it became part of the Bracław Voivodeship. Between 1569 and 1793 the town was a part of Poland. In 1648, Vinnytsia found itself at the epicenter of the Cossack uprisings led by Bohdan Khmelnytsky. In February 1651, during the defense of the city, Ivan Bohun's Cossack regiment defeated a 20,000-strong Polish army. Vinnytsia was part of the Hetman state until 1667, and during 1672-1699 was a part of the Ottoman Empire. Under Polish rule, Vinnytsia was a royal city. On 18 March 1783, Antoni Protazy Potocki opened the Polish Trade Company in Vinnytsia. The 1st Infantry Regiment of the Polish Crown Army was stationed in the city in 1788 before it was relocated to Piotrków Trybunalski.

Late modern period

After the Second Partition of Poland in 1793 the Russian Empire annexed the city and the region. Russia moved to expunge the Roman Catholic religion. Catholic churches in the city, including what is currently the Transfiguration Cathedral, were converted to Russian Orthodox churches.

Vinnytsia on a 1910s postcard

In the Russian census of 1897, Vinnytsia had a population of 30,563. It was the third largest city in Podolia region after Kamianets-Podilskyi and Uman. After railway connections were completed in 1871, Vinnytsia developed rapidly economically and infrastructurally. The city architect Hryhorii Artynov erected a number of buildings (a water tower, a theater, churches, hotels and mansions), which still shape the city image.

During the Ukrainian Revolution of 1917-1920, Vinnytsia was chosen three times as the seat of government structures of the Ukrainian People's Republic. The residence of the Directory was Savoy Hotel, which turned the city into a de facto capital. On 16 May 1920, a meeting was held in Vinnytsia between the heads of Ukraine and Poland, Symon Petliura and Józef Piłsudski.

Soviet Vinnytsia became an industrial giant with an emphasis on sugar production, but in the shadow of its prosperity it experienced a devastating man-made famine occurred in Soviet Ukraine from 1932 to 1933.

The Vinnytsia massacre was the mass execution of between 9,000 and 11,000 people in Vinnytsia by the Soviet secret police NKVD during the Great Purge in 1937–1938.

World War II

Vinnytsia was occupied by German troops on 19 July 1941 during World War II. While Vinnytsia had a pre-war Jewish population of over 34,000, only 17,000 of these Jews remained, with the rest of them successfully being evacuated to the interior of the Soviet Union beforehand. Virtually all of the Jews who remained in Vinnytsia under Nazi occupation were murdered in the Holocaust. Nazi atrocities were committed in and near Vinnytsia by Einsatzgruppe C. In 1942 a large part of the Jewish quarter of Yerusalimka was destroyed by Germans.

''The last Jew in Vinnitsa''}}

Related to that period is an infamous photo, known as The Last Jew of Vinnytsia. Recent research has suggested that the photograph was probably made in another town, Berdichev, and not Vinnitsya The Last Jew in Vinnitsa is a photograph taken during the Holocaust in Ukraine showing an unknown Jewish man—probably on 28 July 1941—about to be shot dead by a member of the Einsatzgruppen, a mobile death squad of the German SS. The victim is kneeling beside a mass grave already containing bodies; behind, a group of SS and Reich Labor Service men watch.

Adolf Hitler sited his eastern headquarters, Führerhauptquartier Werwolf or Wehrwolf, at the Wehrmacht headquarters near the city. The complex was built in 1941–1942 by Russian prisoners of war. Many of them were killed.{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20120308-hitlers-ukrainian-bunker-revealed|title=Hitler's Ukrainian Bunker Revealed|date=12 March 2012

Hitler spent a number of weeks at Wehrwolf in 1942 and early 1943. The few remains of the Wehrwolf site, described in one report as a "pile of concrete" because it was destroyed by the Nazis in 1944, can be visited. Plans to create a full-fledged museum had not come to fruition as of August 2018.

Later Soviet era

After the end of World War II, Vinnytsia was the home for major Soviet Air Forces base, including an airfield, a hospital, arsenals, and other military installations. The headquarters of the 43rd Rocket Army of the Strategic Rocket Forces was stationed in Vinnytsia from 1960 to the early 1990s. The 2nd Independent Heavy Bomber Aviation Corps, which later became 24th Air Army, was stationed in Vinnytsia from 1960 to 1992.

Independent Ukraine

The Ukrainian Air Force Command has been based in Vinnytsia since 1992. During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the command center was significantly damaged by Russian cruise missiles on 25 March 2022.

On 14 July 2022 the center of the city was attacked with three Russian cruise missiles. Missiles hit the local NeuroMed clinic and House of the Officers, which was currently used as a concert hall. Due to the strike 27 people were killed (three children among them), 80 were hospitalized. The next day the Russian Ministry of defense said that the target was top-ranking Ukrainian military officers and representatives of foreign military industry companies.

On 12 October 2022, a pilot Vadym Voroshylov (call sign Karaia) destroyed 5 "Shahed 136" drones near Vinnytsia. Due to damage to the plane, Vadym ejected in Vinnytsia oblast, having previously diverted the fighter jet from the settlement. For this, he was awarded the title of Hero of Ukraine.

In 2023, the city of Vinnytsia opened a representative office to the European Union, becoming the fourth Ukrainian sub-national administration or organisation to take up an offer to use office space in the European Committee of the Regions (CoR).

Population

As of 1 July 2025, the population of Vinnytsia is 356 379 people.

By population, among cities of Ukraine Vinnytsia ranks among the 10 largest cities (excluding the temporarily occupied territories).

Education and science

Detail of the Vinnytsia clock tower
Vinnytsia State Pedagogical University

Educational institutions of the city of Vinnytsia:

  • 63 preschool education institutions. Electronic registration is available for enrolling children in communally owned pre-school education institutions;
  • 55 institutions of general secondary education (44 communal and 11 private forms of ownership).
  • 8 institutions of state-owned professional (vocational and technical) education;
  • 3 community-owned out-of-school education institutions:
    • Vinnytsia City Palace of Children and Youth;
    • Vinnytsia city center of artistic and choreographic education of children and youth "Barvinok";
    • Center for Extracurricular Education "School of Success".

There are many universities and research institutions in Vinnytsia:

  • Mykola Pirogov Vinnytsia National Medical University;
  • Vinnytsia National Agrarian University;
  • Vinnytsia National Technical University;
  • Mykhailo Kotsiubynskyi Vinnytsia State Pedagogical University;
  • Vasyl Stus Donetsk National University, evacuated from Donetsk in 2014 due to Russian armed invasion in eastern Ukraine;
  • Vinnytsia European University;
  • Vinnytsia Institute of Trade and Economics of Kyiv National University of Trade and Economics;
  • Vinnytsia Institute of Economics and Social Sciences.

There is also the Regional Universal Scientific Library named after prominent local historian Valentyn Otamanovskyi in Vinnytsia.

Economy

Vinnytsia is a prominent industrial city in Ukraine.

There are Roshen confectionery corporation, Crystal diamond polishing corporation, RPC Fort largest Ukrainian firearms manufacturing corporation, Mayak corporation, Budmash corporation, Pnevmatyka corporation, PlasmaTec corporation, a parquet board manufacturer Barlinek Invest, Vinnytsia Oil and Fat Plant, Vinnytsia Food and Gustatory Factory PJSC, Agrana Food LLC and others.

Industrial parks and investments

There are 4 industrial parks on the territory of Vinnytsia City Territorial Community that are included in the Register of Industrial Parks of Ukraine: Vinnytsia Industrial Park (with an area of 35.7 ha), Industrial Park Vinnytsia Cluster of Refrigeration Engineering (with an area of 19.27 ha), Industrial Park Winter Sport (with an area of 25 ha), Industrial Park "VinIndustry" (with an area of 26.34 ha). The facilities of UBC Cool (production of refrigeration equipment for food and beverages), KNESS (production of solar panels) are already operating on the basis of industrial parks, HEAD plant (production of equipment for winter sports) is under construction.

Digital economy

Vinnytsia is among the top five cities in terms of the number of specialists in IT. This sector is represented, in particular, by the following companies: Gemicle, Playtika, Onseo, EPAM Ukraine, Infopulse, Avenga, Ajax System, Sigma Software, Ciklum, N-iX, RIA Internet Group. The main office of LetyShops, the largest cashback service in Ukraine, the leader in this market segment, is located in the city.

The creative economy ecosystem is developing. In recent years, several private and community spaces have emerged in response to a growing demand: Artynov Creative Space, iHub Vinnytsia, M9, the Vinnytsia Regional Youth Center "Kvadrat", Cherdak, and the VNTU Startup School Sikorsky Challenge.

Vinnytsia Innovation and Technology Park “Crystal” is being developed on the premises of the former Crystal Jewelry Factory. Its activities aim to strengthen existing and create new high-tech and creative industries in Vinnytsia and the broader Podillia region. Vinnytsia Innovation and Technology Park “Crystal” is an example of how old industrial facilities can be renovated and transformed into growth points for the creative economy and small businesses. The first phase of construction is being implemented as part of a joint project by the German governmental company GIZ and UNDP — "Support to Rapid Economic Recovery of Ukrainian Municipalities (SRER)" — and is scheduled to be commissioned in early 2025.

Clusters

As part of the decentralized cooperation program between the city of Vinnytsia and Vinnytsia region with the city of Dijon, the Burgundy-Franche-Comté region, AgroVin agricultural cluster was created in March 2021. The participants of the agrocluster are processing enterprises of the city of Vinnytsia, agricultural producers and specialized scientific institutions (Agrana Fruit Ukraine LLC, Vinnytsia Food and Gustatory Factory PJSC, Agroposluhtransservis LLC, Dibrova LLC, Organik-d LLC, Vinnytsia National Agrarian University, Institute of Fodder and Agriculture of Podillia National Academy of Sciences).

Vinnytsia Instrumentation and Automation Cluster was created in February 2021 by local enterprises (Promavtomatyka-Vinnytsia LLC, Innovinprom LLC, Maitek Plus LLC, Grampis LLC, Tiras LLC, Vinaerogis LLC, and others) that work in the instrument-making industry and are engaged in the automation of production with the aim of creating competitive products, creating jobs for the best local graduates, promoting the definition and implementation of smart specialization of the city territorial community and the region.

In 2021, the public union Vinnytsia Automation and Instrument Making Cluster (Vinnytsia AIM Cluster) was established. Its goal is to boost economic potential and develop the regional ecosystem of high-tech sectors. Currently, it includes 26 members, among them 2 universities, IT companies, and enterprises engaged in alternative energy, robotics, and medical technologies.

IT-Association Vinnytsia was founded in 2018, which has been actively operating for six consecutive years. It includes 18 members and 50 partners.

Military

The headquarters of the Ukrainian Air Force is situated in Vinnytsia.

Politics

Vinnytsia is considered the long-time political base for Ukrainian oligarch and former President Petro Poroshenko. He owns a local confectionery (as part of the Roshen Corporation) and was elected member of parliament from the local constituency for several convocations. However, contrary to some speculations, Poroshenko has never lived in the city.

Volodymyr Groysman, the former Ukrainian Prime Minister (2016-2019) is from Vinnytsia.

Parks and squares

Pyatnichansky park

Central urban park in Vinnytsia

Park of Culture and Recreation named after Mykola Leontovych located in Vinnytsia city between the streets Soborna (center), Mahistratska and Khmelnytske Shose.

The park is 40 hectares.

There are numerous monuments (soldiers in Afghanistan, Sich Riflemen, killed police officers, victims of NKVD's purge), and the Alley of outstanding countrymen are objects of leisure and recreation: a summer theater, a stadium, an ice club, a city planetarium, a fountain, a chess club, Mini-Vinnytsia open air museum, numerous attractions and gaming machines.

For more than 70 years of its history, the Central Park has always been a place of celebrations and recreation for the residents and for holding local/municipal events and holidays. It became a fine tradition to hold folk festivals and all major holidays in the Park, in particular on the City Day, Europe Day, Independence Day, and more.

Buildings and structures

  • Saint Nicholas Church is considered to be the oldest building in the city — built in 1746 in the place of older one;
  • Baroque Transfiguration Cathedral, built in Vinnytsia in 1758 by Italian architect Paolo Fontana;
  • Baroque Church of the Holy Virgin Mary Angelic, built in 1748—1761 as Capuchin monastery;
  • The National Pirogov's Estate Museum and church where his embalmed body preserved. Built in 1866—1885, opened for visitors as a museum in 1947;
  • The Literary and Memorial Museum of a “great Sun Worshiper”, a classical author of Ukrainian literature Mykhailo Kotsiubynsky, built in 1860-1890th and opened for visitors as a museum in 1927;
  • Vinnytsia water tower, built in 1912 by city main architect Hryhorii Artynov;
  • Savoy Hotel, built in 1912—1913;
  • Vaksman family's real estate, built in 1915 in Art Nouveau style. Address: 24, Symona Petliury Street. Built by architect Moisey Aaronovitch Vaksman. Architectural landmark;
  • TV Tower Vinnytsia — the tallest guyed tubular steel mast in the world, built in 1961;
  • The new Greek Catholic Church at South Bug river, built in 1993—1996;
  • Baptist Church ″Evangelical House″– reportedly one of the largest Evangelical Church buildings in Europe, built in 1996;
  • Seventh-day Adventist Church, built in 2000th;
  • Multimedia Fountain Roshen, built in 2011, it is considered one of the largest floating fountains in Europe. It is the major multimedia attraction in the city.

In the city, numerous historical buildings are being repaired and new ones are being built.

Вінницькі Мури.jpg|Former Jesuit monastery and Transfiguration Cathedral File:Монастир Капуцинів, Вінниця, вул. Соборна, 12—14.JPG|Capuchin monastery (est. 1748—1761) File:Водонапірна вежа Вінниця.jpg|Vinnytsia water tower (est. 1912) File:Vinnytsia Kozytskoho 36 SAM 0054.JPG|Savoy Hotel (est. 1912—1913) File:Vinnytsia, Soborna St 02.jpg|Main Cathedral Street (nowadays) File:UKR Winnica, kosc greko-katol, Najswietszej Bogarodzicy, 2019.09.08, fot Ivonna Nowicka (6) corr.jpg|Church of the Intercession (est. 1996)

Transport

Air

Havryshivka Vinnytsia International Airport (IATA: VIN, ICAO: UKWW) is situated near Vinnytsia.

Railway

[[Vinnytsia railway station

There is a railway station in Vinnytsia, Vinnytsia railway station, which is a part of Southwestern Railways. In 2013 it was named among 10 biggest railway stations in Ukraine. The current Vinnytsia railway station was built in 1952 and is the 4th railway building in Vinnytsia. The previous three were destroyed.

Vinnytsia is an important transport hub for internal and external railway connections. Most of the international trains which cross through Ukraine have a stop in Vinnytsia. For example, trains to Przemyśl (Poland) and from Sofia (Bulgaria), Chisinau (Moldova), Bratislava (Slovakia), Belgrade (Serbia), Budapest (Hungary) transit through Vinnytsia. For internal railway connections, Vinnytsia is also an important transport point for trains heading to Western Ukraine (Lviv, Khmelnytskyi, Chernivtsi), the South (Odesa), as well as to Central Ukraine (Kyiv).

Tram

Main article: Trams in Vinnytsia

[[Trams in Vinnytsia
Vinnytsia Transit Map
An unofficial transit map of Vinnytsia featuring tram, trolleybus, bus and minibus (marshrutka) routes

The tram is the most popular public transport in Vinnytsia. There are six tram routes in Vinnytsia:

Number of the routeRoute starting and ending point123456
The railway station (Zaliznychnyi vokzal) – Elektromerezha.
Barske Shose – Vyshen'ka
Vyshen'ka – Electromerezha
Barske Shose – the Railway station (Zaliznychnyi vokzal)
Barske Shose – Elektromerezha
The railway station (Zaliznychnyi vokzal) – Vyshen'ka.

The most trams in Vinnytsia are donations from the Verkehrsbetriebe Zürich (VBZ), the public transport operator of Zürich, Switzerland. In the early 2000s, the VBZ donated its 1960s Karpfen and Mirage rolling stock to Vinnytsia, and they will do so again in 2022 with 35 Tram 2000 vehicles. The Swiss trams retain their blue and white liveries in Vinnytsian service.

Since 2015, "Vinnytsia Transport Company" began manufacturing VinWay trams based on Tatra KT4SU wagons and VinLine trolleybuses. As of 2025, 10 modernized trams and 31 trolleybuses are running in the city.

Bus

In Vinnytsia, there are the Central Bus Station and the Western Bus Station, which connects Vinnytsia with Bar, Ukraine and some other destinations.

Healthcare

As for the 2025, the city's healthcare system is represented by more than 40 treatment and preventive medical institutions, 12 of which are communally owned by the city of Vinnytsia. There are more than 49 private medical institutions.

Vinnytsia Regional Clinical Hospital named after Mykola Pirogov of Vinnytsia Regional Council was founded in Vinnytsia in 1805 as the first municipal hospital, and under the name of Mykola Pirogov has been operating since 1917. Today, the hospital is a multidisciplinary, highly specialised, curative and preventive health care institution, whose mandate is to provide medical assistance to patients in 22 specialized areas. 12 clinical departments and cycles of Vinnytsia National Medical University named after Mykola Pirogov are located in the centers and departments of the hospital.

Vinnytsia Regional Clinical Treatment and Diagnostic Center for Cardiovascular Pathology is a specialized medical facility that provides routine and emergency medical care to patients with diseases of the circulatory system. The institution has 5 departments and a clinical diagnostic laboratory, where 186 medical workers work. The operating units of the center provides coronary angiography (diagnostics of heart vessels), stenting of damaged arteries, open heart surgery.

Sport and sportsmen

Tsentralnyi Stadion
Home stadium of [[PFC Nyva Vinnytsia

The sport in the city of Vinnytsia is concentrated around the Tsentralnyi Stadion (Central Stadium), which was built back in 1949. The stadium is built to hold competitions in many sports.

Since establishing the Vinnytsia Oblast in 1932, Vinnytsia became its administrative center. The city became the center of cultural life (including sports) in the whole region formerly known as Podolia.

In 1958, the football team of masters Lokomotiv was established in Vinnytsia, today known as Nyva Vinnytsia. The team was established for the All-Soviet competitions in Class B (tier 2). Initially, it was intended to be located in Kyiv (first owner Southwestern Railways), but, due to politics, it moved to Vinnytsia. It was the only team from the region (Vinnytsia Oblast) that competed at the All-Soviet competitions. While competing at the Soviet competitions, Nyva Vinnytsia won the republican championship of the Ukrainian SSR twice, in 1964 and 1984. On 2 January 2021, Nyva player Artur Zahorulko became the club's president.

Vinnytsia is the base of the Ukrainian field hockey. 2 leading Ukrainian teams are registered here: "Hockey Club Olympia-Kolos-Sequoia" (HC OKS-SHVSM) and "Dynamo-ShVSM-VDPU".

Vinnytsia is known for playing sports such as basketball. There are two professional teams: the women's "Vinnytsia Lightnings" and the men's "Vinnytsia Bisons". "Vinnytsia Bisons" is a fairly well-known brand in Vinnytsia and Ukrainian sports. This men's basketball team twice won silver medals and once - bronze of the higher league of the championship of Ukraine in 2018.

In 2006, the first American football championship of Ukraine took place, in which "Vinnytsia Wolves" took second place. In 2013, 6 "Wolves" players were invited to be selected for the national American football team of Ukraine. Three of them became part of it. In 2014, the team started playing in the higher league, where they played in the group stage with Kyiv "Bandits", Odesa "Pirates" and Kyiv "Vityaz". 2017 — silver medalists of the ULAF Championship of Ukraine. The youth teams of the Vinnytsia Wolves sports club, which formed the basis of two national flag football teams of Ukraine, became participants in the New Generation Bowl 2022 and returned home with achievements. The U15 national team won the silver cup of the tournament, and the U17 team won the bronze.

Vinnytsia Olympians

Pavlo Khnykin — swimmer, two-time silver medalist of the 1992 Summer Olympics; Inna Osypenko-Radomska — sprint kayaker, champion of the Olympic Games in Beijing, silver medalist at the Olympic Games in London in single kayak rowing (distance of 500 and 200 meters) and bronze medalist of the Olympic Games in Athens as part of the women's foursome, world champion in Poznan (Poland) K1 500 meters; Hanna Balabanova — sprint canoeist, bronze medalist of the Olympic Games in Athens.{{Cite web|publisher=olympics.com|url= https://olympics.com/en/athletes/hanna-balabanova

Vinnytsia boxers

Serhii Bohachuk — Vinnytsia boxer, WBC Continental Americas title holder; Viacheslav Uzielkov — WBA Intercontinental light heavyweight boxing champion, politician and TV-presenter; Roman Holovashchenko — international (2009—2010) and intercontinental champion (2017—2018) according to the IBO version, world champion according to the GBC version (2009—2010), European champion according to the IBF version (2016);

Culture

Theaters of the city

  • Vinnytsia State Academic Music and Drama Theater named after Mykola Sadovskyi, founded in 1910;
  • Vinnytsia Academic Regional Puppet Theater "Zolotyi Kliuchyk" — one of the oldest in Ukraine (founded in October 1938);
  • Vinnytsia Regional Philharmonic named after Mykola Leontovych, founded in 1937.

List of the museums

  • The National Pirogov's Estate Museum;
  • Vinnytsia Regional Museum of Local Lore;
  • Vinnytsia Regional Art Museum;
  • Military-historical Museum of the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine;
  • Vinnytsia Literary and Memorial Museum of Mykhailo Kotsiubynskyi;
  • Oleh Lutsyshyn Pottery Museum;
  • Vinnytsia Tram Museum;
  • AutoMotoVeloFotoTeleRadio Museum;
  • Museum of the Ukrainian postage stamp named after Yakiv Balaban;
  • Museum of transport models;
  • Holocaust Museum in Vinnytsia;
  • Museum of Jewish life.

Notable people==

  • Nathan Altman (1889–1970) a Jewish and Soviet avant-garde artist, Cubist painter, stage designer and book illustrator;
  • Larysa Artiugina (born 1971) a Ukrainian documentary film director and activist;
  • Sam Born (1891–1959) an American businessman, candy maker and inventor of Peeps
  • Matvei Petrovich Bronstein (1906–1938) a theoretical physicist, a pioneer of quantum gravity;
  • Valeriy Chaly (born 1970) diplomat; Ambassador of Ukraine to the USA from 2015–2019;
  • Todros Geller (1889–1949) a Jewish American artist, teacher and master printmaker;
  • Volodymyr Groysman (born 1978) politician, Prime Minister of Ukraine 2016-2019;
  • Oleg Khoma (born 1966) translator and historian;
  • Victoria Koblenko (born 1980) Dutch actress, presenter and columnist;
  • Mykhailo Kotsiubynsky (1864–1913) author of novels and short stories. His home is a museum;
  • Volodymyr Kozhukhar (1941–2022) conductor and academic teacher;
  • Mykola Leontovych (1877–1921) Ukrainian composer who worked here;
  • Alexander Lerner (1913–2004) Soviet-Israeli cyberneticist and dissident;
  • Yuri Levada (1930–2006) sociologist, political scientist and the founder of the Levada Center;
  • Yitzkhok Yoel Linetzky (1839–1915) a Yiddish language author and early Zionist;
  • Anatoly Lysenko (1937–2021) a Soviet and Russian TV figure, journalist, director and producer;
  • Marina (born 1989) Polish singer of Ukrainian origin;
  • Jerzy Niezbrzycki (1902–1968) captain of the Polish Army;
  • Alla Pavlova (b. 1952), composer;
  • Nikolay Pirogov (1810–1881) originally from Moscow, an Imperial Russian doctor, founder of field surgery, spent his later years in Vinnytsia; his home is a museum;
  • Olya Polyakova (born 1979) a Ukrainian singer, actress, TV presenter and comedian;
  • Maksym Shapoval (1978–2017) intelligence officer and head of a special forces of the Ukrainian Chief Directorate of Intelligence; assassinated by Russian agents in 2017;
  • Vladyslav Skalsky (born 1976) a Ukrainian civil servant and politician;
  • Olga Storozhenko (born 1992) Miss Ukraine Universe 2013 & Top 10 Miss Universe 2013;
  • Mykola Tochytskyi (born 1967) diplomat, politician and deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs;
  • Leonid Isaakovich Vail (1883–1945) a Jewish Painter and art theorist;
  • Selman Waksman (1888–1973) American biochemist and microbiologist, Nobel prizewinner, born near Vinnytsia;
  • Inna Abramovna Zhvanetskaia (born 1937) composer, piano teacher and lecturer.

Sport

  • Aonishiki Arata (born 2004) sumo wrestler; the first Ukrainian to win a top division championship, and the second Ukrainian to reach the top division in Japanese Sumo.
  • Serhiy Cherniavskiy (born 1976) a cyclist; silver medallist at the 2000 Summer Olympics;
  • Sergey Fedorchuk (born 1981) a Ukrainian Grandmaster chess player;
  • Pavlo Khnykin (born 1969) freestyle swimmer, team silver medallist at the 1992 Summer Olympics;
  • Illia Nyzhnyk (born 1996) a Ukrainian chess grandmaster;
  • Sergei Polyakov (born 1968) a Russian sport shooter, silver medallist at the 2004 Summer Olympics.

International relations

Twin towns – Sister cities

Vinnytsia is twinned with:

Partner cities

Vinnytsia also signed the partnership agreements with cities:

Notes

References

References

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  5. "Винница / определение слова Винница – город, ц. Винницкой обл., Украина. Впервые упоминается в 1363 г". Diclib.com.
  6. "Vinnitsa Climate Vinnitsa Temperatures Vinnitsa Weather Averages".
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  41. "Barlinek -Головна сторінка".
  42. "ПрАТ «Вінницький ОЖК".
  43. "Home".
  44. Beteiligungs-AG, AGRANA. "Home".
  45. "Industrial park".
  46. "UBC Group".
  47. "Home".
  48. "Companies of HEAD Group – HEAD".
  49. "Де в Україні айтішнику жити добре. Рейтинг міст DOU".
  50. "Playtika – Infinite ways to play".
  51. "ONSEO {{!}} Full Cycle Digital Production".
  52. "EPAM {{!}} Software Engineering & Product Development Services".
  53. "LetyShops cashback service".
  54. "На Вінниччині створено інноваційний агропромисловий кластер "AgroVin" — Вінницька обласна військова адміністрація".
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  60. "Roshen Fountain in Vinnitsa was opened! :: Confectionery Corporation ROSHEN".
  61. "Десять крупнейших ж/д вокзалов Украины 2014 года".
  62. "Розклад {{!}} Вінницький трамвай".
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  67. "ВІННИЦЯ 2 табло автовокзалу: оперативна інформація автовокзалу (автостанції) про розклад руху автобусів та його зміни, наявність вільних місць.в автобусах".
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  87. (2022-09-15). "Вінниця підписала угоду про співдружність з латвійським містом Вентспілс – Сергій Моргунов".
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