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The world's ten creepiest abandoned cities

Some cities die. The people leave, the streets go quiet, and the isolation takes on the macabre shape of a forlorn ghost-town - crumbling with haunting neglect and urban decay. From Taiwan to the foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountains, these abandoned cities lurk in the shadows of civilization. Their histories are carried in hushed whispers and futures stillborn from the day of their collapse. Some have fallen victim to catastrophe while others simply outlive their function. I think we can all agree on one thing - they are all very creepy.
Gallery: Ten abandoned cities
Pripyat
Location: Pripyat, Ukraine - 100km from Kiev
Story: On April 26, 1986, the Chernobyl reactor began its tragic meltdown. The incident was a huge blow to the viability of the nuclear energy platform, and still today, the town of Pripyat is an abandoned shell of a city frozen in a 1980's Soviet time-warp. While the failed reactor has been entombed in a an appropriate sounding casing called a "sarcophagus," the area remains unsafe for human life. The town has thrived in one aspect though. Wildlife has returned to the area in droves. Wolves silently hunt among the towering apartment buildings, and boars forage for food in the abandoned amusement park - which strangely opened the day after the reactor explosion in the midst of evacuation.
Abandoned since: 1986
Sanzhi
Location: Sanzhi district, New Taipei, Taiwan
Story: This area called Sanzhi was originally a vacation resort catering to U.S. servicemen north of Taipei. The architecture could be called UFO futuro chic, and the abandoned resort community had difficulties from the beginning. During construction, many workers perished in car accidents, and other freak accidents were common. The urban legend online search trail places the death count close to twenty. The deaths were attributed to supernatural causes. Some speculated that the resort was built on a Dutch burial ground while others attributed the misfortunes to a dragon statue destroyed during construction. Either way, the ruins never took their first guest, and the stillborn project was abandoned.
Abandoned since: 1980

Craco
Location: Craco, Basilicata, Italy
Story: Built on a summit, Craco's utility was initially derived from its ability to repel invaders. The town's placement on a cliff precipice also threatened its integrity. After being rocked by a number of earthquakes and subsequent landslides, Craco was abandoned for lower ground. Today, the empty village is great for exploration and houses a number of interesting old world churches such as Santa Maria della Stella.
Abandoned since: 1963
Kolmanskop
Location: Kolmanskop, Namibia
Story: Once a successful diamond mining community, Kolmanskop is now a desert ghost town where the houses welcome only sand. The desert city was originally built when Germans discovered great mineral wealth in the area. They built the town in an architecturally German style with a ballroom, a theater, and the first tram system in Africa. The desert reclaimed the town when the miners moved on. The sands have filled houses, covered the streets, and slowly erased most signs of civilization aside from the towering homes and public buildings. The sight of a decaying German town in the shifting sands of the Namib desert is anachronistically delightful.
Abandoned since: 1954
Ghost Island
Location: Hashima Island, Nagasaki, Japan
Story: During the industrial revolution in Japan, the Mitsubishi company built this remote island civilization around large coal deposits in the Nagasaki islands. The island is home to some of Japan's first high rise concrete buildings, and for almost a century, mining thrived on the island. At its peak, the 15 acre island housed over five thousand residents - coal workers and their families. Today, a post-apocalyptic vibe haunts the abandoned island and the dilapidated towers and empty streets exist in a creepy industrial silence. In 2009, the island opened to tourists, so now you can take a trip to explore the Ghost Island's abandoned movie theaters, apartment towers, and shops.
Abandoned since: 1974
Oradour-sur-Glane
Location: Oradour-sur-Glane, Limousin, France
Story: During World War II, the Nazi troops came upon Oradour-sur-Glane and completely destroyed the village, murdering 642 individuals. The burned cars and buildings remain frozen in time as they did in 1944, a reflection of the monstrosity of war and a memorial to the villagers who lost their lives. The massacre was one of mankind's most vicious moments. All visitors to the "martyr village" are asked to remain silent while wandering the melancholy streets of tragedy.
Abandoned since: 1944
Centralia
Location: Centralia, Pennsylvania, United States
Story: The entire city of Centralia was condemned by the state of Pennsylvania and its zip code was revoked. The road that once led to Centralia is blocked off. It is as if the city does not exist at all, but it does, and it has been on fire for almost fifty years. In 1962, a fire broke out in a landfill near the Odd Fellows cemetery. The fire quickly spread through a hole to the coal mine beneath the city, and the fires have been burning ever since. Smoke billows out from cracks in the road and large pits in the ground randomly open up releasing thousand degree heat and dangerous vapors into the air. The city has been slowly evacuated over the years, though some residents have chosen to stay, believing that the evacuation is a conspiracy plot by the state to obtain their mineral rights to the anthracite coal reserves below their homes. Smells like lawyers to me.
Abandoned since: still marginally occupied by 10 or so brave souls

Humberstone
Location: Northern Atacama desert, Chile
Story: Declared a UNESCO heritage site in 2005, Humberstone was once a bustling saltpeter refinery in the desert of northern Chile. Life on the moonscape of the Chilean pampas is extremely sparse, and outposts like Humberstone served as work and home for many Pampino miners. The hostile environment proved a menacing part of everyday life for Humberstone residents. Their efforts to extract nitrates from the largest saltpeter deposit in the world transformed farming in Europe and the Americas in the form of fertilizer sodium nitrate.
Abandoned since: 1960

Bodie
Location: Bodie, California, United States
Story: The poster boy for a ghost town, Bodie is absolutely stunning in its dereliction. The boom-town over 8,000 feet up in the Sierra Nevadas was a gold rush outpost, and, at its height in the 1880's, allegedly one of the largest cities in California. 65 saloons lined the dusty mile long main street, meaning the saloon to resident ratio was definitely high enough to keep the sheriff busy. Beyond the swilling of brews though, Bodie developed into a city filled with big town characteristics like churches, hospitals, four fire departments, and even a Chinatown district. Today, visitors are free to to walk the deserted streets of this town built on gold and hope.
Abandoned since: 1942, though the last issue of the local newspaper, The Bodie Miner, was printed in 1912.

Kayaköy
Location: Kayaköy, Muğla, Turkey
Story: Thousands of Greek speaking Christians lived in this town just south of Fethiye in southwestern Turkey for hundreds of years. The rather large village has been a virtual ghost town since the end of the Greco-Turkish War. Over 500 houses and several Greek Orthodox churches populate this garden of decaying structures. Some hope exists for a resurgence of this old city, as organic farmers and craftsmen have began to trickle in to this fringe community.
Abandoned since: 1923
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Filed under: History, Photos, Africa, Asia, Europe, North America, South America, Namibia, China, Japan, Taiwan, Turkey, France, Italy, Ukraine, United States, Chile, Ecotourism

















Reader Comments (Page 3 of 7)
Eric Apr 28th 2011 2:27PM
Um, do the Sanzhi UFO homes still exist? I just researched them online thinking that would be an awesome trip and everything I find says they were torn down in 2009...?! Anyone.....?
simonplan Apr 28th 2011 2:55PM
there's also Bussana Vecchia, Italy.
patardugno Apr 28th 2011 2:58PM
I grew up in Pennsylvania in an area that has the Mine Fires constantly burning in the mountains, you can see the the smoke or steam plumming up from them, depending on the weather something you can see them more clearly in many places. Before it is going to rain there, the sulfar gets trapped by the clouds & high humidity level & you can tell that it is going to rain because of that smell of sulfar in the air. But, I never heard of that town. They must have that hidden real good. But, I remeber seeing something on the news about 15 yrs ago, about a town that was being permanently evacuated for some reason & some people said they were not leaving. That was probably that town. Basements collaps into the mines, roads cave in, sink holes appear in backyards, all over the valley I grew up in. The Susquahanna Riverbed collapsed & water filled into the Mines & it keeps eroding the ground from underneather. That's why it happens.
Kevin Apr 28th 2011 9:40PM
It is outside of Mt. Carmel on Rt61 - before Ashland
jaguignon Apr 28th 2011 3:55PM
If the Susquehanna were to flow into a mine that was on fire, I would think it would put the fire out ; the Susquehanna is a big river!
Jeanne Apr 28th 2011 7:02PM
That's the town they based the movie version of Silent Hill off of too. Definitely creepy and really added to the story in the movie.
TamalaJo Apr 28th 2011 3:00PM
neat places to file zombie or post-apocalyptic films
Susan Apr 28th 2011 3:08PM
They should re-open Hashima island in Japan to the many homeless if it is in a safe place away from radiation.
leftwingsuckers Apr 28th 2011 3:09PM
THIS IS THE DAMAGE DONE FROM LEFTWING PROGRESSIVES - DETROIT NEW JERSEY LOS ANGELES ANYTOWN AMERICA UNDER DEMOCRAT RULE...
normandy Apr 28th 2011 3:27PM
bodie sounds like a cool place to live..and detroit is defitnely not deserted at the least,over 7 hundred thousand ppl live their including my grandparents..fyi
Deej Apr 28th 2011 4:35PM
Been to Bodie a few times. The place is even CREEPIER after dark. Had the strangest feeling I was being watched. My boyfried at the time, who went with me, said he felt the same way, but he doesn't "believe in ghosts". Well, I DO, and have even seen more than a few.
There is a game called "Ghost Town Mysteries" that uses Bodie as the setting. I have played it and the graphics are AMAZING!!
Cristina Apr 28th 2011 3:54PM
Just visited Bodie last year. Had been there as a child and it is truly a fascinating place. It was 45 degrees in July and the guide book said that was normal. It must have been the reason for all the saloons, keeping warm!! You must drive on a dirt road (washboard type) for several miles once you turn off the interstate but it is well worth it.
ROLLANDO Apr 28th 2011 3:38PM
The author of this article did not do his homework. There were other abandoned cities of significance. One is in western Pennsylvania, "Pit Hole." Sometime during the mid 1800's, oil was discovered on a farm. A town sprung up. at it's peak, it had population of about 15,000 people. In 3 years from beginning to end the town was a virtual ghost town. People moved out to Texas and other areas of the west where more oil was found. Now, the town is a historical site with small billboards with pictures of the old town showing where various buildings once stood. And the only other evidence left are some streets and few pits or basements of some buildings. A nice place to visit in the Fall if one is interested in watching the changing of the trees' foilage. I believe there is a museum about Pit Hole in either nearby Oil City or Titusville.
Kevin Apr 28th 2011 9:40PM
Centralia, Pennsylvania, United States
Actually was started by the fireman. They would burn the "town dump" which was in a stripping hole. Only the last time they did it, they caught the vain of coal on fire. My dad was raised they and my relatives had to move out. Steam still comes out the cracks in the street on the picture
barbarascy385 Apr 28th 2011 3:41PM
Centralia, Pennsylvania was actually some of the inspiration for the fictionalized city of Silent Hill in video games of the same name. If you have ever played the game you realize how creepy living in a place with non-stop fog could be.
Kevin Apr 28th 2011 9:40PM
SilentHill, the movie, also use Centralia, Pennsylvania as the bases of the burning below the town and the smoke and ashes. In real live, the town never had ashes come down on it.
Ralph Apr 28th 2011 3:56PM
You left out Lidice, Czech Republic, on June 1942 the town was 100% destroyed by the nazis in retaliation for the assasination of Reinhard Heydrich, nazi who controlled Bohemia and Moravia, in and around Prague. 198 women and 98 children were shipped Ravensbruck concentration camp and 173 men were shot on the spot. Every house and structure was buried, even the cemetary there , nothing was left...no trace of the town. Only a monument is there today.
Mark Apr 28th 2011 4:10PM
Jacktown, MS also know as Jackson, MS. Not quite a ghost town but it is filled with spooks. Much .like Memphis, TN
Donald Apr 28th 2011 4:40PM
I have been to Jackson many times, as well as I live about an hour from there. I grew up in Mississippi. And being the capitol of Mississippi, I don't think Jackson will ever be a ghost town. From what I've seen, it is a relatively packed city(about 190,000+ people). So, were you talking about Jackson, or areas around Jackson? Because pretty much anywhere in Mississippi that isn't near a town or city is just about deserted. Too much woods and hills, I guess.
sue Apr 28th 2011 4:13PM
spooky....