Attractions around Sumy
Explore 14 attractions, restaurants, shops around Sumy
4.5 (71)
Altanka
Pokrovskaya Sq., Sumy Ukraine
The octagonal open wooden gazebo with a diameter of 6 meters and a height of 10 meters was built on a high brick plinth in 1900-1901. The gazebo was built at the expense of the merchant Ivan Leshchinsky according to the project of the architect Matviy Shchavelyov. The building is decorated with columns, carved cornices and roof spiers. Outwardly, it resembles an unusual openwork building. The ornament of the Altanka contains coded symbols of Trypillia culture, pagan symbols of the sun and procreation. At the same time, the symbols of Christianity and Judaism are intertwined with them. During the revolution of 1905-1907, the Altanka was set on fire several times, and in 1913 it was rebuilt. The Altanka became a symbol of the city after the liberation of Sumy in September 1943, thanks to a photo by a front-line photojournalist. Today, the gazebo is an integral part of the image of Sumy and the city's business card.
4.5 (43)
Fontain Sadko
Geroev Stalingrada St, Sumy 40010 Ukraine
4.0 (40)
Kozhedub Park
Gagarin St. 15, Sumy 40010 Ukraine
5.0 (34)
Trinity Bishops Cathedral
prov. Troitskyj 24a, Sumy 40022 Ukraine
Trinity Church was built at the highest point of the intersection of Troitska and Novomestenska streets. It was completed by the Lintvarev family in 1827. At the end of the 19th century, the building could no longer accommodate all believers, so the headman Pavlo Kharitonenko suggested that the clergy build a new church at its own expense, resembling St. Isaac's Cathedral in St. Petersburg. In 1901-1914, the Trinity Cathedral was built according to the project of Sumy architect Gustav Scholz. The mosaic floor of the church was designed by Russian architect Alexei Shchusev. Famous painters Ignatius Nivinsky, Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin and Mikhail Nesterov worked on the interior, stained glass and iconostasis of the church. After 1917, the cathedral went through the difficult times. It was repeatedly closed, and during World War II the premises were damaged. During the Soviet era, a warehouse of haberdashery was located in the cathedral for almost thirty years. From 1988 to 2001 – the organ
4.0 (30)
Children's Park Skazka
Tarasa Shevchnko Ave., Sumy 40010 Ukraine
3.0 (26)
Monument to Sugar
Pokrovskaya Square, Sumy 40010 Ukraine
4.5 (22)
Monument Bag
Voskresenskaya St., Sumy Ukraine
4.5 (18)
Chekhov House Museum
Chekhov st., 79, Sumy Ukraine
4.5 (18)
Spaso-Preobrajenskii Sobor
Ul. Sobornaya 31, Sumy 40000 Ukraine
One of the greatest churches in the city of Sumy is the Transfiguration Cathedral. In 1788, residents built a brick church on the site of the wooden Church of the Transfiguration. The construction required more than a million bricks, so a separate brick factory was built for this purpose. The 60-foot bell was brought from the liquidated Sumy Assumption Monastery. The cathedral acquired its modern look after a major reconstruction carried out in 1882–1892 according to the project of Kharkiv architect Mykhailo Lovtsov. The expansion of the cathedral took place at the expense of Sumy merchants Dmytro and Mykola Sukhanov, to whom grateful Sumy residents installed memorial plaques in the temple vestibule. The chimes for the bell tower of the Transfiguration Cathedral were made in 1884 by the companies Winter (St. Petersburg) and Voipe (Bokenem, Germany). Transfiguration Cathedral Sumy is the only Orthodox church in the world with Catholic sculptures installed on its dome.
4.5 (18)
Fontain
Pokrovskaya Square, Sumy 40010 Ukraine
4.5 (17)
Love Lantern
Voskresenskaya St., Sumy Ukraine
4.5 (14)
Sumy State Science Library of Krupskaya
Geroyev Stalingrada St. 10, Sumy 40010 Ukraine
5.0 (12)
Nikanor Onatsky Regional Art Museum in Sumy
Pokrovskaya square, 1 Red Sq., 1, Sumy 244030 Ukraine
5.0 (11)
Sumy Local Lore Museum
Gerasima Kondratyeva St., 2, Sumy Ukraine