Sergei Nikitich Kovalev | |
Birth Date: | 15 August 1919 |
Birth Place: | Petrograd, Russian Soviet Republic |
Death Place: | Saint Petersburg, Russia |
Discipline: | Naval architecture |
Employer: | Rubin design bureau |
Significant Projects: | Typhoon and Delta class SSBN |
Significant Advance: | Head of Rubin Bureau |
Native Name Lang: | ru |
Sergei Nikitich Kovalev (Russian: Серге́й Ники́тич Ковалёв; 15 August 1919, Petrograd – 24 February 2011, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian engineer and architect who designed nuclear submarines for the Soviet Navy while leading the Rubin Design Bureau.
He was the chief designer for the following submarines: Project 658 (NATO reporting name: Hotel class), 658M (Hotel II), 667A Navaga (Yankee class), 667B (Delta I), 667BD (Delta II), 667BDR (Delta III), 667BRDM (Delta IV), and most famously project 941 Akula (Typhoon class).[1]
92 submarines were built to Kovalyov's designs. The only nuclear submarine designed by Rubin during the Cold War for which Kovalyov wasn't the chief designer was Project 685 Plavnik (NATO Mike class), the bureau's only SSN.
Kovalev remained semi-active in naval engineering throughout his life, designing ice-resistant platforms for hydrocarbon exploration on the Arctic shelf in later years.
An accomplished painter in his retirement, he was made an honorary member of the Saint Petersburg Union of Artists.
Kovalev was given numerous awards for his service to the Soviet Union, including: