Saturday, November 27, 2010

Siberian Ghost Cities Scare


Siberian Nearly-Abandoned & "Ghost" Cities Could Be the Worst Halloween Scare Ever

We'd like to call them "ghost towns", but they are clearly not abandoned. Amazingly, people still live in them, go to work in the harshest possible conditions (paradoxically making it the richest and mightiest industrial area in Russia) and then come "home" to relax in inhuman weather, non-existing infrastructure, in dangerously dilapidated buildings...

Truly, this is an "abandoned, terrifying, ruined environment", multiplied to the N-th degree! Judge for yourself:






Just in time for Halloween: no skeletons, witches, or giant spiders - instead, something real and more terrifying - witness the life in Cherepovetz City (the name loosely translates as "City of Skulls"), the center of the Russian North-West SeveroStal industrial zone:





Welcome to Norilsk - the Very Definition of Cold Hell

Norilsk is a true "Wild East" Siberian town, the quintessence of tough living, tough conditions and tough-as-nails people.





The average life expectancy in Norilsk is 46-48 years... Here is why:

- minus 10 degrees Celsius is considered "warm weather"
- this city is built on permafrost, so buildings deteriorate quickly and most are in crumbling conditions
- the city was originally built by prisoners (untold numbers of them died), so it is very probably haunted... (no, of course not, just kidding)
- the industrial pollution is on par with the worst towns in China - it's officially one of the ten most polluted cities in the world
- there are no homeless people, because nobody can survive minus 56 degrees Celsius.
- they have literally 45 days of night - the depressing, miserable Arctic night
- the city often endures severe punishing winds, up to 25 meters per second

The ecology around Norilsk is so atrocious that trees can spontaneously ignite from industrial chemicals in the ground - and so only burned sticks are left:



The local forest:



The local grocery store:



People spend their lives (and murderously cold winters!) in these apartments -






Some apartments still stand, while others have already fallen apart, their basements plundered for concrete by locals to build garages and more shaky housing:




Santa Claus lives here?... I think not -



Those on the bottom floors fare the worst during the brutal winter:







Mysterious ruins:





Permafrost:



This permafrost makes any building's foundation unstable, which presents huge problems for long-term construction. In time, some areas begin to look like an earthquake disaster zone:



When winter comes, people are shuttled to work in buses... but it gets even more surreal inside:







Missing the bus could be a life-threatening situation:



8 comments:

  1. How can people tolerate those conditions? I will never complain again.

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  2. Not a fan of the cold, but this place is beautiful

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  3. I was born in Norilsk and lived there till 9 before we moved. My parents lived all their lives there. They were 35 when we moved. Lots of people still live there, also my cousin and my former school friends. W lived a normal life there, there are modern facilities there, and people's salaries are muh higher than those in the rest of Russia.

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  4. if you jerk are going to put the pics of the worst parts of the city then you can show any big city in the world as a ghost city ,, go to their site c it yourself .. its a normal city that gets really cold in the winter thats all ..
    http://cherinfo.ru/

    ReplyDelete