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All Ukraine Prypiat Abandoned City of Prypiat
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Abandoned City of Prypiat

The ghost town left by the worst nuclear disaster of all time is being taken over by nature and urban explorers.

Prypiat, Ukraine

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The center square of Pripyat, once home for 50,000 people. After 22 years of neglect, nature has started to seep through the concrete   wikitravel.org/Public Domain
“PRIPYAT 1970”   thedakotakid/CC BY-SA 2.0
An abandoned building in Pripyat.   User submitted
A pile of gas masks left behind in Pripyat.   Roman Harak/CC BY-SA 2.0
An abandoned classroom.   Roman Harak/CC BY-SA 2.0
An amusement park in Pripyat that was going to be opened right after the May 1st festivities of 1986. Because of the Chernobyl accident the ferris wheel, swings and bumper cars were never used.   wikitravel.org/Public Domain
School’s out forever   Carismarkus / Atlas Obscura User
An abandoned gymnasium.   Roman Harak/CC BY-SA 2.0
Cartoon character Cheburashka in Pripyat.   User submitted
Nature takes over in Pripyat.   PeterKongstad
The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant from a distance.   Justin Stahlman/CC BY 2.0
An illustration of Lenin left behind in Pripyat.   Roman Harak/CC BY-SA 2.0
The Pripyat ferris wheel.   David Holt/CC BY-SA 2.0
A doll in a gas mask posed by a visitor to Pripyat.   PeterKongstad
Disheveled drawers in Pripyat.   PeterKongstad
An abandoned building in Pripyat.   User submitted
Graffiti in Pripyat.   User submitted
Children’s belongings left behind in Pripyat.   sebastiang
Chernobyl nuclear power plant’s reactor 4 encased in a sarcophagus.   wikitravel.org/Public Domain
A primary school workbook.   Eamonn Butler/CC BY 2.0
Soviet imagery on the Pripyat police station.   Eamonn Butler/CC BY 2.0
Dolls left behind in Pripyat.   PeterKongstad
Polissya hotel (Готе́ль Полісся) - in Pripyat   FrequencyPen / Atlas Obscura User
In Pripyat   FrequencyPen / Atlas Obscura User
Empty swimming pool in Pripyat   FrequencyPen / Atlas Obscura User
Sign at entrance   lagilles / Atlas Obscura User
City entrance sign  
from our trip in 2011   klean9 / Atlas Obscura User
Inside palace of cultures   Carismarkus / Atlas Obscura User
A vending machine in Pripyat.   User submitted
The Chernobyl nuclear reactor.   User submitted
A geiger counter registers radiation outside the Chernobyl nuclear reactor.   User submitted
Palace of Culture Energetik   chernobaevlucy / Atlas Obscura User
Supermarket   chernobaevlucy / Atlas Obscura User
  shovax / Atlas Obscura User
  Cultured Kiwi
  Johan SWE / Atlas Obscura User
  Johan SWE / Atlas Obscura User
  shovax / Atlas Obscura User
from our trip in 2011   klean9 / Atlas Obscura User
  shovax / Atlas Obscura User
Polissya hotel (Готе́ль Полісся) - in Pripyat   FrequencyPen / Atlas Obscura User
The Ferris Wheel at the Pripyat theme park   FrequencyPen / Atlas Obscura User
  shovax / Atlas Obscura User
  Johan SWE / Atlas Obscura User
  shovax / Atlas Obscura User
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When one thinks of Chornobyl, a vacation spot is certainly not the first thing to come to mind. However, more than three decades after the terrible reactor meltdown, tours of the contaminated towns surrounding the infamous reactor are gaining in popularity.

On April 26, 1986, during a test to see how much power was needed to keep the No. 4 reactor operating in the event of a blackout, the No. 4 reactor of Chornobyl Nuclear Station exploded causing fire, which led in the following days to much damage to the building, releasing dangerous amounts of radioactive chemicals into the air, which over time contaminated millions of square miles in dozens of European nations. The IAEA estimates that approximately 30 people were killed by the explosion and related radiation exposure, with several thousand additional deaths due to higher cancer incidence possible over the long term. 

The town closest to the No. 4 reactor was Prypiat, a city of 49,000 founded in 1970 to house workers from Chornobyl. It had 15 primary schools, a large hospital complex, 25 stores, 10 gyms, along with parks, cinemas, factories, a pool, an amusement park, and other marks of a thriving community. Because of the people who lived there, it was one of the most beautiful and luxurious cities in the Soviet Union. Only about three kilometers from the explosion, the entire city was forced to completely evacuate in just three hours on April 27. It was possible only because this scenario was part of the building plans of the plant.

Over three decades later, this ghost town is a freeze-frame of the Soviet Union in 1986. Communist propaganda still hangs on walls, and personal belongings litter the streets and abandoned buildings. The hammer and sickle decorate lampposts, awaiting May Day celebrations that never took place. Toys are strewn about a schoolhouse where they were last dropped by children who are now fully grown. All clocks are frozen at 11:55, the moment the electricity was cut.

Despite the common info, the city was never completely abandoned. Military, police, scientists, and other public authorities use the city as a base to clean radiation in the newly created zone of alienation. The famous pool was in service until 1996. There is still electricity in some part of Prypiat, and to this day there is a functional vehicle base in the city, water supply for the plant, and in the former laundry... there are still laundry after 30 years, where the uniforms of plants workers are washed. in the same building triangle radiation danger signs are made. 

Ironically, the absence of humans has been excellent for wildlife. In 1986 wildlife was not doing well in Chernobyl, outcompeted for resources by pine and dairy farms. After people left the deer and boar populations returned almost immediately, and despite having radiation levels thousands of times higher than normal, they were not showing obvious signs of mutations (though the plants got pretty weird including some actual glowing) and the animal populations grew enormously. After the elk, moose, deer, and boar returned so did their predators the wolves and lynx. Today the animal populations more closely resemble that of a national park than a radioactive containment zone. As it turns out, from the animal's point of view, a nuclear disaster is preferable to normal human habitation. 

To tour Prypiat, Chornobyl, and other surrounding villages, one must first obtain a day pass from the government. These passes can be obtained through the touring companies located in Kyiv, about 110 kilometers from the blast site. There are five well-known tour agencies that take visitors to Prypiat. However, due to the lack of repair, the buildings and other structures in the town are becoming increasingly dilapidated. Because of this, many tour companies will not allow visitors into the buildings.

Other than the crumbling buildings, safety is not a major concern. It takes between 300 and 500 roentgen per hour of radiation to deliver a lethal dose. Levels on the tour range from 15 to several hundred micro-roentgens per hour. All tours end with screening for radiation levels.

Already, after only three decades of abandonment, Prypiat is beginning to be swallowed up by the surrounding forest. Someday soon, it will no doubt be completely overgrown.

Related Tags

Abandoned Disasters Nuclear Disaster Areas Ruins Ghost Towns Soviet History Soviet Architecture

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Added By

Delireus

Edited By

sebastiang, BubbaJoe, cscaccio, Molly McBride Jacobson...

  • sebastiang
  • BubbaJoe
  • cscaccio
  • Molly McBride Jacobson
  • Eolas
  • Osage
  • shovax
  • Allison
  • EricGrundhauser
  • klean9
  • chernobaevlucy
  • Carismarkus
  • Cultured Kiwi
  • Johan SWE
  • Traveling
  • lagilles
  • FrequencyPen

Published

August 12, 2016

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Sources
  • http://pineappleexplorer.com/2016/02/25/inside-chernobyl-exclusion-zone/
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pripyat
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chernobyl_Nuclear_Power_Plant
Abandoned City of Prypiat
Prypiat, 255614
Ukraine
51.404503, 30.054233

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