Over 3,000 residential buildings in St. Petersburg will experience hot water shutoffs lasting 1-4 days from May 13 to August 25. Repair crews will start work after the heating season ends, which happens when temperatures stay above 8°C for five days straight.
JSC TEK SPb plans to inspect about 4,700 kilometers of pipelines across 17 districts of St. Petersburg and four districts in the Leningrad Region. Workers need to check all heating networks, fix boiler houses, and repair central heating points before fall arrives.
Residents can use online search tools to learn exactly when their buildings will lose hot water. Four companies manage the city's heating: JSC TEK SPb, JSC Teploset Sankt-Peterburga, Peterburgteploenergo, and Teploenergo. Each company has published specific outage dates on its websites.
The city's heating committee also posted complete shutdown schedules online under "Preparation and implementation of the heating season." Officials hope these planned summer repairs will prevent unexpected heating failures during the winter months.
JSC TEK SPb plans to inspect about 4,700 kilometers of pipelines across 17 districts of St. Petersburg and four districts in the Leningrad Region. Workers need to check all heating networks, fix boiler houses, and repair central heating points before fall arrives.
Residents can use online search tools to learn exactly when their buildings will lose hot water. Four companies manage the city's heating: JSC TEK SPb, JSC Teploset Sankt-Peterburga, Peterburgteploenergo, and Teploenergo. Each company has published specific outage dates on its websites.
The city's heating committee also posted complete shutdown schedules online under "Preparation and implementation of the heating season." Officials hope these planned summer repairs will prevent unexpected heating failures during the winter months.