The commuter bus ride from Baku took a solid hour and a half. Buses run frequently, almost every 10 minutes, tickets are only 0.7 manats per person. The rolling stock is not the first freshness. Unlike in the city, payment is made in cash. The road is not picturesque at all. The flow rate is low. The trip is exhausting.
The beach is about 300 meters from the bus stop of course.
I must say that the beach season in Baku is closed from the beginning of September, and our outing fell at the end of September. That's why we were all alone here most of the time. Sometimes we were accompanied by fishermen who came by boat, and residents who came to buy fish from them.
The sea is clean (the water was still suitable for swimming), the beach is not very good, but here I remind you that no one has cleaned it for almost a month. For entertainment, we had access to a piano and a swing.
There are tables on the beach, there are rows of awning supports, and closed eateries. There's a decent restaurant at the very end, and it even worked.
In the season, it can be very good here if it is not overloaded (although the dimensions are solid) and manage to maintain order, but these are just my assumptions.
The beach is very large and wide. In summer, it's probably a good place to swim. In September, there is nothing to do here, nothing works, there are no people, garbage, very strong wind and waves. It looks like a homegrown Chernobyl