Top 10 abandoned farms in Crimea. Secret military bases in Crimea that you can visit

In this publication, we invite you to get acquainted with the TOP 5 declassified military bases that anyone can visit today!

Some 25 years ago, it was impossible for an outsider to enter this territory - secret military bases were strictly guarded. Along a radius of several kilometers, “chekists in civilian clothes” were constantly on duty, along the perimeter there were checkpoint posts with firing points and armored personnel carriers on duty, and any illegal entry into the territory could result in the opening of “fire to kill”. And today all these military bases are open for visits to everyone.

Airbase "Bagerovo"

The very first base that was destroyed. This "strategic" object of the Crimea is located on the Kerch Peninsula - the construction of the air base was started in 1947.

Initially, the construction of the test site was carried out for the purpose of testing nuclear weapons there, and for this purpose more than three aviation regiments were deployed to it. However, in 1970, the USSR signed an agreement banning nuclear testing, which was the beginning of the end of Bagerovo.


Today, on the territory of the once super-strong strip almost 4 km long, you can see only a few half-surviving hangars and towers.

"Lunodrome" - a space object near Simferopol

This object is more of a cosmic nature than a military one. At one time, the location of the future cosmodrome was chosen by the legendary Sergei Korolev, the chief designer of rocket and space systems of the Soviet Union. This place turned out to be the village of Shkolnoye, which is located not far from Simferopol.


It was here that once Nikita Khrushchev carried out the very first radio-space communication session with cosmonauts Belyaev and Popovich. And it was from this lunodrome that the first Soviet lunar rover was controlled.
It is still not known for certain whether secret work was carried out to develop designs for military space rockets or not. Most likely, this secret will remain under the ruins of the first Soviet lunodrome.

Rocket stationary complex "Utes" / Object No. 100

This underground bunker, beloved by lovers of abandoned objects, is located on the coastline between Balaklava and Cape Aya. At one time, this Cold War complex protected the inhabitants of Sevastopol from possible enemy penetration (at that time, the United States was the most likely adversary).


Today there is practically nothing left of Sotka. To our great regret, the Ukrainian command was unable to maintain the serious "stuffing" of the missile system. What they managed to do was dismantled and taken away, the rest was safely plundered.


But until recently, the Sotka complex was a reliable defender of Sevastopol from a possible attack by American ships. But thanks to the "economic Ukraine", which has not learned how to rationally use multimillion-dollar top-secret military facilities, it was not possible to save it. Today, the ruins of this missile site are a favorite adventure spot for diggers.

Object 825GTS - Secret submarine base in Balaklava

As before, it is the largest declassified strategic facility in the world, which at one time was completed and successfully operated in full. Due to the large scale of this complex, Balaklava became a regime (closed) city in Soviet times.


To date, one part of this plant has been given over to the museum, which successfully receives a large number of tourists. The other part of the strategic facility is still classified, and it is not possible for civilians to see it.


In the Soviet years, during the Cold War with the United States, the construction of the plant was skillfully disguised as the construction of a conventional automatic telephone exchange. And if curious people decided to poke their noses into matters of national importance and find out what kind of secret object it was, then the KGB officers instantly discouraged being interested in what was hidden from view. And the plant was built by a specially created department in a short time, in just four years, and it was intended for the repair of submarines.


The design of the plant was a huge, well-protected bunker, in which it was possible not only to carry out repair work, but, if necessary, to shelter people and maintenance personnel. The thick walls of the facility made it possible to very effectively defend against possible nuclear attacks from the enemy, cover and repair the submarine, and suddenly leave the camouflaged bunker to strike back. The plant was assigned the category of a strategic object of all-Union significance.

Object No. 221 - Reserve command post of the Black Sea Fleet in the mountains

The construction of one of the largest underground bunkers was a response to the American monstrous nuclear war plan called "Drop Shot", according to which more than ten nuclear missiles were scheduled to be dropped on the territory of Sevastopol. The leadership of the USSR understood that it was by no means impossible to lose its main southern base of the Black Sea Fleet, so it was decided to build underground equipped casemates of a huge scale.


It was decided to place the ZKP Black Sea Fleet at a depth of several hundred meters in the Alsu rock. It was there that a huge, multi-level bunker was mounted, capable of withstanding an atomic strike. It was planned to control nuclear submarines from this strategic facility, and in the event of a nuclear war, ten thousand officers and junior military ranks could be evacuated into it. Can you imagine the scope of the construction was deployed?


The construction of the point was almost completed when the USSR collapsed. There was no one to finance such a large-scale project, and Ukraine, in fact, did not have a single nuclear submarine. As a result, the ZKP Black Sea Fleet has undergone ruthless dismantling.


Today, guides lead tourists along the confusing corridors of the bunker, and some locals still live by the principle: "It's hard, but we'll carry it." Thrown into the hands of vandals, the “two hundred and twentieth object” is destroyed under the nozzles of the scrap metal cutters. Excursion companies make good money on tourists, luring them to a once-secret object, and marauders continue to fill their pockets with money from the sale of sawn metal. The object is available to everyone, and at the first acquaintance with it, you understand how large-scale and monumental work was ruined by Ukraine. Fans of abandoned objects should be warned that it is better not to go there without a guide - on the territory of the bunker there are holes in the floor and tunnels flooded with water, which can be deadly. And in such a huge complex, it is easy to get lost.

The locals have been waiting for the transfer of Crimea under the wing of their beloved Motherland for 23 long years. And maybe now, in the hands of skilled business executives, the once important strategic objects will find a new life, because the threat from the Yankees, who want to impose their world domination, is now renewed with renewed vigor. And here, by the way, we are completely protected, we just need to revive what was tightly built in the USSR, and was so ruthlessly ruined by the “friendly” Ukraine today.

"Secret", "military", "forbidden", "abandoned" - these words have always excited the minds and attracted thrill-seekers. In Crimea, of course, you can find many military bases, secret bunkers and fortifications. Still, the peninsula was the front line of defense in the south of the USSR and the Russian Empire. Some of these bases are still operating, and some have long been abandoned and now anyone can get there. The portal "" has prepared for you a list of the most interesting abandoned secret objects of Crimea.

Attention! Visiting most of the objects on this list can be dangerous to life and health.


Nuclear power plant in Shchelkino

Transport corridor of a nuclear reactor. Photo: aquatek-philips.livejournal.com

Undoubtedly, the “queen” of the Crimean abandoned facilities is the Shchelkinskaya NPP. This cyclopean building began to be erected in 1974. The station was supposed to supply electricity to the entire Crimea. However, in 1987, after the Chernobyl tragedy, the construction site was frozen. Although Shchelkinskaya NPP had already managed by that time to take a place in the Guinness Book of Records as the most expensive nuclear reactor in the world. Now the station is in an extremely deplorable state. It has been pulled apart for metal for more than 20 years, and in recent years, official work has begun on its dismantling.

How to get there:

The nuclear power plant is located near the village of Shchelkino, on the banks of the Aktash reservoir.


Object №221


View of Object No. 221 from the mountains. Photo: perekop.ru

The power plant in Shchelkino, although grandiose, is still not too secret. But the reserve command post (ZKP) of the Black Sea Fleet, or object No. 221, is just the standard of an “abandoned secret object”. Fearing a nuclear strike on Sevastopol, the leadership of the USSR decided to build an underground bunker for the ZKP Black Sea Fleet in the Alsu rock. The retaliatory strike was to be directed from the bunker. In addition, 10 thousand people were to be evacuated underground in the event of a nuclear threat - officers of the Black Sea Fleet and their families. The 90% ready bunker was abandoned in 1992. Since then, it has been taken away for metal, and some firms lead tours there.

How to get there:

Object No. 221 is located near an abandoned quarry near Mount Gasfort near Balaklava. The entrance to the underground bunker is located in the lobby of the fake building on top of the hill.


Kerch fortress


Fort "Totleben". Photo: suntime.com.ua

The Kerch Fortress, also called Fort "Totleben" (which causes slight confusion - Kronstadt also has Fort "Totleben") is the oldest of the objects on our list. The fort was built after the Crimean War. The fire of the coastal batteries of the fort was supposed to block the Kerch Strait for enemy ships. In Soviet times, the fortress was used as an ammunition depot and a prison - the disciplinary battalion of the Black Sea Fleet was based here. Now the fortress is open for free visiting and belongs to the Kerch Museum-Reserve. However, work in the fortress is still limited to mine clearance. Every summer, sappers of the Russian Emergencies Ministry find hundreds of ammunition from the times of the Great Patriotic War in the fortress.

How to get there:

The fortress is located on Cape Ak-Burun between the village of Arshintsevo and the center of Kerch.


Object №100


Entrance to Object No. 100. Photo: perekop.ru

Another abandoned "coastal battery" worthy of attention is located near Sevastopol. This is object No. 100, or simply "Sotka", as the locals call the building. Sotka is an underground shelter for the Utes coastal anti-ship missile system. It was built in 1956. Object No. 100 has two launch silos. Cruise missiles were delivered to them through tunnels along rails. The Sotka missiles could send to the bottom any enemy squadron that dared to approach Sevastopol closer than a couple of hundred kilometers.

Now one of the Sotka divisions has been restored and is again guarding the Crimean coast.

How to get there:

Object No. 100 is located between Cape Aya and Cape Fiolent. Turning off the Yalta - Sevastopol highway towards the village of Oboronnoye, you will run into a closed barrier. Then you have to walk towards the sea.


"Barrel of Death"


"Barrel of death" fort South Balaklava. Photo: www.naotduhe.ru

Another interesting fortification is located above the Silver Beach near Sevastopol. This is the so-called "barrel of death" of the South Balaklava fort. The semi-circular design of sheet armor with loopholes in the floor and walls was supposed to allow the defenders of the fort to fire at the enemy on the beach. And initially there were two such firing points. Only one has survived to this day. "Urban legend" says that the red commissars were shot in this "barrel". Indirectly, the legend is confirmed by many bullet marks on the inside of the barrel at the height of the head. However, the "barrel" inspires certain concerns - the concrete base has cracked, so that a multi-ton structure can collapse on the heads of tourists on Silver Beach.

Next to the barrel are the concrete casemates of the South Balaklava fort itself, which are also of interest, but not so unique.

How to get there:

Fort "Southern Balaklava" is located on Mount Spitiya (Asketi) to the east of the Fortress Mountain in Balaklava.


Object №76


Storage of nuclear bombs. Photo: milzone.at.ua

The first atomic bombs were very fragile structures that also needed to be assembled immediately before use. Therefore, both sides of the Cold War built entire underground towns designed to store and assemble the most terrible weapons. One of these Soviet secret towns - Object No. 76 - is located between Sudak and Feodosia. Four adits stretch underground: 7-a, 7-b, 7-c and the central one. Moreover, the central adit is a giant horseshoe two kilometers long. The base was able to survive a nuclear strike - not only was it protected by the thickness of the earth, but also all vital systems were duplicated. So, if a nuclear explosion destroys the main substation, then the operation of the base will be provided by a backup, located far enough away so as not to be affected by the explosion.

How to get there:

Object No. 76 is located in the Kiziltash tract near Sudak.


Not quite abandoned objects


A plate of the Space Communications Center in Shkolny. Photo: urban3p.ru

Many former secret military facilities in Crimea cannot be called abandoned. So, the most interesting "object 825-GTS" in Sevastopol, although it is no longer a submarine base, has become a museum. Now there you can get acquainted with the history of the Cold War and the submarine forces of the Black Sea Fleet. In addition, after the return of Crimea to Russia, many military facilities began to be restored. For example, in many guidebooks you can read about the abandoned space communications center in Shkolny near Simferopol. However, not so long ago, the military announced the beginning of the restoration of the station. So we do not recommend visiting it - jokes are bad with sentries. The same applies to the Military Special Combine No. 1 - an underground power plant near Sevastopol.

One of the most terrible places in Crimea is the Starorussky cemetery in Simferopol. Photo: ktelegraf.com.ua

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Many people, as psychologists say, in order to recharge with adrenaline, you need to go through some kind of psychological test and feel fear. This explains, for example, a passion for horror films or an attraction to visiting scary mysterious places. There are a lot of such people in Crimea, and they are overgrown with deep secrets and legends. We offer a rating of the most terrible places on the peninsula, where an atmosphere of fear and mystery reigns.

No. 1. Abandoned nuclear power plant in Shchelkino

Dark corridors, stairs, a giant rusty crane that was supposed to install a nuclear reactor in the building. The nuclear power plant in Shchelkino (on the Kerch Peninsula) makes an indelible impression. The nuclear power plant in Shchelkino was supposed to be launched in 1989, three years after the accident in Pripyat. But the echoes of the tragedy spread around the world and sowed seeds of doubt about the need for nuclear energy. So, the Crimean NPP, with almost 80% readiness of the first power unit, was decided not to be launched. And we inherited the reactor building, in the turbine section of which enterprising youth began to hold discos of the Kazantip festival. And some airsoft clubs arrange shootouts based on the popular computer game Stalker in the dark corridors of nuclear power plants.

No. 2. Old Russian cemetery in Simferopol

The old cemetery, located in the area of ​​the Central Market, is one of the few that have survived after many reconstructions of the city over the past two centuries. It is recognizable by the Church of All Saints, built and consecrated in 1864. Immediately behind it is the entrance to the cemetery, where many famous people of the late 19th - early 20th century are buried: Archbishop Gury, Crimean artist Nikolai Samokish, commissar of the 51st Army brigade Ivan Gekalo, underground fighters Viktor Efremov, Zoya Rukhadze, Evgenia Deryugina and many others. Some graves have been dug up - this was done by grave diggers, treasure hunters. And at the very end of the cemetery there is a Gothic temple, which is covered with black and red paints. They say that satanic inscriptions and pentagrams are left here by occultists during night rituals.

No. 3. Children's room in the Adzhimushkay quarries

During the Great Patriotic War, tens of thousands of people died in the dungeons of Kerch. Most of them - 13 thousand - remained forever in the Adzhimushkay quarries (only 48 of them survived). In addition to ordinary fighters of the Soviet army and partisans, among the inhabitants of the quarries were local residents, including women and children. Most of them also died here, without waiting for release. A rusty crib and charred dolls are all that now reminds of the terrible death of hundreds of boys and girls of all ages who were forced to hide from the Nazis in the dungeons of Kerch.

No. 4. Bunker "Alsu"

Many kilometers of mines, densely closing the passages of metal hatches, everywhere on the walls - an image of a radiation sign. Four floors underground, tunnels going down 200 meters, and a huge room for a nuclear reactor... side of their enemies - mainly the United States as a nuclear power. It was planned to evacuate the command of the Black Sea Fleet to the bunker in case of a nuclear strike.

No. 5. Sleepy cemetery

A destroyed stone fence, broken tombstones and holes in the ground at the site of the graves... In fact, the contents of the graves were barbarously looted by marauders, and the bones of soldiers and officers who fell in the Chernorechensky battle of the Crimean War in 1855 are lying next to the tombstones. The Crimean authorities have not yet bothered to put in order the Sleepy, or, as it is also called, Gorchakovsky, cemetery (by the name of the battle commander), so when visiting, you should be careful - you can easily fall into overgrown with grass and shrubs, and therefore not everywhere noticeable graves.

No. 6. Bagerovsky ditch

In the anti-tank ditch near the village of Bagerovo in 1941, about seven thousand residents of Kerch were shot, including 245 children. Now there is a monument to the dead on this place. Announcements appeared on the streets of Kerch, according to which Jews registered with the Gestapo were to appear on Sennaya Square on November 28, 1941, from 8 to 12 o'clock. Failure to comply with the order was followed by execution. The bitter irony of fate turned into the fact that they were shot just after they appeared at the prison commandant's office. From December 2, the anti-tank ditch began to fill with bloodied naked bodies of people. The eerie atmosphere of death still, after more than 70 years, hovers over this place.

Bagerovsky ditch

No. 7. Roaring Grotto

The underwater caves of Mount Karadag on the southeastern coast of Crimea, according to geologists, lead to the bowels of an extinct volcano. The largest grotto, crashing into the body of the rock for almost 70 meters, is simply striking in its gloominess and mystery, and the waves create their own unique ominous roar in it. Many Crimean local historians claim that the entrance to the kingdom of the dead located in Cimmeria, which Homer mentions, was localized by the Greeks on Karadag, in a place that today is called the Roaring Grotto.


Roaring Grotto

No. 8. Object "Sotka"

Another echo of the Cold War, in addition to the Alsu bunker, is located in the mountains near Balaklava - this is the Utes Coastal Stationary Missile System, or, as it is called, object-100 (or simply Sotka). Since Soviet times, it has been abandoned and is being scrapped. Nevertheless, two huge silos located right in the rocks are still striking in scale. Next to the rectangular necks, there are the remains of metal guide rails, along which massive gates once drove off, and formidable rockets rose from the mine on special platforms.


Object "Sotka"

No. 9. Cape Meganom

This place is famous for mysterious "power rings" (they appear in the grass in annular stripes up to half a meter wide and are clearly visible from a bird's eye view) and unhealthy interest in it from UFOs. They say that the cause of the "ring" phenomenon is some kind of magnetic anomaly. Perhaps these are the consequences of an underwater nuclear bomb test that allegedly took place here in 1960. As for flying saucers, they are regularly observed at the Cape. Crimean ufologists believe that one of the saucers was shot down just above Meganom. The military found a fragment in which cold thermonuclear fusion allegedly took place before their eyes.


Cape Meganom

No. 10. Petrovskaya beam

If the old civil cemetery is located in the area of ​​the Central Market, then the largest military churchyard of Simferopol was located in the area of ​​Petrovsky Balka. Soldiers who died from illnesses and wounds received during the battles of the Crimean War were buried there. More than 36,000 Russian soldiers rested in the cemetery, but in the 30s of the last century, the graves were razed to the ground, and on the newly formed hill, local residents began to bury their pets, not even suspecting that they could stumble upon the remains of their ancestors.

Palaces and estates of Crimea are located not only on the southern coast of the peninsula, but also in small villages, which not even all Crimeans know about.

tarpan tamer

In the Nizhnegorsk region, in the village of Tsvetushchy, there is a Shatilov estate recognized as an architectural monument. This surname is known to few today. Meanwhile, Iosif Shatilov was an outstanding zoologist and agronomist, the founder of the first agricultural school in Russia. Shatilov spent a total of 20 years in the Crimea. It was Shatilov who came up with the idea of ​​artificial afforestation in the steppe zone of Russia. And the first forest protection strip in the South of Russia was planted in the Crimean estate of Shatilov in 1877. Iosif Shatilov was one of the first to draw attention to the tarpans, the wild horses of the Crimea, by publishing several articles about them.

In most of the Azov, Kuban and Don steppes, tarpans disappeared at the end of the 17th - beginning of the 19th centuries. They survived for the longest time in the Black Sea steppes, where they were numerous in the 1830s. However, by the 1860s, only their individual herds remained in the Crimea, and in December 1879, in the Tauride steppe near the village of Agaiman (now Frunze), 35 km from Askania-Nova, the last steppe tarpan in nature was killed. Through the efforts of Shatilov in 1862, a tarpan foal caught in the Crimea (according to other sources, in Kherson) in 1854 was delivered to Moscow in transit through Mokhovoe (the Shatilov family estate in the Oryol province). He lived out his life in the Moscow Zoological Garden, where he was photographed by Shatilov in 1884, Crimean Newspaper reports.

But let's get back to Shatilov's estate in Tsvetushchy. This estate was built in the middle of the 19th century, three utility rooms have survived to this day: a guest complex, a granary and a former coach house (built in 1888). On the pediment of the buildings, letters are guessed, each brick has a brand, and on the Marseille tile one can still make out not only the name of the owner of the plant, but also the place where it was made, for example, “Gorbachev from Seitler”.

Model for Israel


Another architectural monument little known to the general public can be found near the city of Saki, in the village of Chebotarka. This manor house was built at the beginning of the 20th century and belonged to the Schlee family. The estate consisted of a landowner's house, several houses for workers and a two-story stone barn. There is a large garden in front of the estate. He, unfortunately, did not survive to this day, but determined the Soviet fate of the estate: in the 1930s, the Jewish Chebotarsky Agricultural College was organized on its territory (in the early 1920s, the north-west of Crimea became one of the main areas for the resettlement of Jews to join them to agriculture. - Ed.) According to some reports, this technical school became, in fact, the place where the model of Israeli kibbutzim was worked out - agricultural communes, which turned out to be much more viable than Soviet collective farms and state farms. In 1956, the Chebotarsky College was merged with the Pribrezhnensky Agricultural College, near Evpatoria, and transferred there. Currently, the landowner's estate in Chebotark is in disrepair.

Majestic Warrior Estate

The hunting house of Prince Felix Yusupov in the village of Sokolino near Bakhchisaray was built at the beginning of the last century by the famous architect Nikolai Krasnov. In those days, the village of Sokolinoye was called Kokkozy. And the owner began to call his estate "Askerin", that is, "belonging to a warrior." Built in 1914, this house (and in fact, a real palace) became a wedding gift to the wife of Prince Yusupov, Princess Irina Alexandrovna. Designed by Krasnov in an oriental style, Yusupov's hunting lodge was originally white, covered with turquoise tiles. Inside the house there were two wall fountains. One of them, made of marble, was a copy of the Bakhchisaray fountain of tears and was located in a large two-color living room (now it is installed in the Nikitsky Botanical Garden. - Ed.). The guests of the estate (including the Russian Emperor Nicholas II and King Manuel of Portugal) were provided with a wardrobe of luxurious Tatar clothes. The guests dressed up as khans, murzas, beys, janissaries and walked around the park with an English and oriental corner, which had a peach orchard, two large pools, decorative flower beds, and flowers. Simultaneously with the construction of the palace, a mosque was designed and built on the site of the old dilapidated Kokkoz-Jami mosque - a gift from Prince Yusupov to local residents, as well as a bridge across the Kokkozka River. After the revolution, the house housed a school, a village council, a reading room and a club. After the Great Patriotic War, a school, a village council, a club, a museum, a camp site, and a boarding school were alternately housed here. Time and numerous owners of the house did not spare the luxurious park and the exquisite interior of the building. Now in Yusupov's house there is a children's health camp "Sokol".

chestnut garden


Another rural estate is located in Kashtanov (Simferopol region). In those days when this village was called Sable, the Tauride governor Andrei Mikhailovich Borozdin lived in the estate. By the way, the chestnut alley, thanks to which the village got its new name, was planted just under Borozdin. It still exists and still leads to a wide staircase and a covered balcony of the main entrance to the governor's manor house. The estate also had magnificent orchards. Lev Simirenko wrote: "The Sably nursery of Borozdin was the first nursery in the Crimea, from which everyone for many years received the stocks of fruit trees they needed." In addition, silkworm caterpillars were grown here and sheep were bred. Borozdin built a mill in Sably, a cloth factory with the production of "up to 15,000 arshins of cloth per year", and a tannery. As for the estate itself, archival documents about its layout say: “The lower floor is 21 long, 7 wide, and 3 sazhens high. Rooms with senets - 17, of which in two living rooms the floors are made of piece walnut wood, varnished, and in others from pine boards, doors for internal entrances and exits - side folding paneled - 18; glass - 2; simple - 3; tile stoves - 12; fireplace - 1". A wooden staircase with chiseled curly balusters led to the second floor. There were “rooms with plank floors - 5, folding doors - 6, simple ones - 4; tiled stoves - 5, fireplace -1.

It is known that among the guests of the estate was Griboyedov: he rested at Borozdin and walked in the local garden, alas, which has not survived to this day. “I get lost along the winding garden paths. Alone and happy, ”Griboyedov wrote in his diary then. In 1828, the estate was bought by Countess Laval, from whom it was inherited by her daughter, Ekaterina Trubetskoy, the wife of the Decembrist Prince Sergei Trubetskoy. In Siberia, the Trubetskoys had a daughter, Elizaveta, who later married the son of the Decembrist Vasily Davydov and received Sables as a dowry. During the Crimean War, 120 wounded were placed in Sably, and the master's house itself was equipped as a hospital. The estate remained the property of the Davydovs until the revolution.

Now the estate houses a number of public institutions: a kindergarten, a library, a shop.

At this facility, you can see two relics of the fleet at once - the B-380 submarine, built in 1981-1982, and the PD-16 floating dock, in which it has been located since 1992 (!) , built in 1938-1941 and nowhere not sailing since 1945. The dock is notable for the fact that it was founded in 1938, but was completed after the start of the Great Patriotic War, and then, during the war years, led a busy life, repairing dozens of submarines, destroyers, ...

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Rangefinder post 30 of the coastal armored turret battery. It is located about half a kilometer from the towers. Previously connected with them paternoy. It is a rather large metal structure and a number of underground structures. You can get into the post itself only through an underground passage, all external doors are welded. Internal pressure doors are open. All more or less significant metal parts have been preserved inside. Also through a small tunnel...

Underground →

A lone NUP (unattended reinforcement point) disguised as a hill. It is a small room, located in a hill, from where down, through a cast-iron ring, you can get to the reinforcement point itself. In it, slightly damaged shields hang on the walls. And some wiring diagrams. The door is not locked, it is easy to open it. Clean inside, no trash

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The Intercollective Farm Glass Container Plant began its history back in 1977, when the first stage was put into operation. The following year, the company was fully operational. At the best time, the number of employees of the plant was more than 1200 people. The huge enterprise was distinguished by a full technological cycle and a very wide range of products, individual projects were easily carried out. 4 automated lines in 1980 produced 400...

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More than ten one - and two - storey houses are located on a large territory. Their condition varies from poor to quite normal. In one of the rooms there are many posters on civil defense. If you search well, you can find a lot more. There is a small detached bomb shelter. It has a table, chairs and you can sit and relax well. There is no security, but since the fence around and the hospital itself are very poorly visible, the stream ...

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It is a large long abandoned building, where the baths used to be. Inside, the remains of furniture and old things have been preserved. The doors are closed, the territory is overgrown, it is very difficult to get inside, but it is possible. Also of interest are two Pobeda cars located on the territory, an old boat and a minibus. The glasses are broken, but the case itself looks quite normal. In the building itself, almost all the glass is intact, and outwardly it looks ...

Institutions →

It was abandoned tentatively in late 2017 - early 2018. Then it was attacked by vandals. Windows were smashed, things and furniture were scattered. Because of this, security appeared in the building, the halls began to close up. Getting into the building itself is not easy, as the windows and doors are boarded up or closed, and an evil guard walks inside. It is very easy to get into the dining room, attached to the building, but the passage from it to the main premises is sealed. Inside you can...

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A small and long abandoned pesticide storage facility for use in nearby orchards. There are three large entrances for vehicles, an outbuilding and a cistern marked "poison". The gates are closed, it is difficult to get into the main part. But access to the annex is free. Inside there is a lot of trash, including bags of saltpeter, rubber boots and a large box of filters for respirators. All this is not guarded in any way and has been preserved only due to a small ...