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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 4 of 7)
kristanicd Apr 28th 2011 4:15PM
Wait... What about Povelgia Island near Italy?
jennifer Apr 28th 2011 4:31PM
OK. I am by no means an avid video gamer, but the story about the town in Pennsylvania sure has some similarities to the game/movie Silent Hill. Anyone?
Steven Apr 28th 2011 4:34PM
A large number of towns in the U.S. are in danger of becoming ghost towns. There has been an exodus of younger people from small towns and from rural areas in general. Many smaller towns are populated mostly by elderly people who lived there all their lives, and once those people are gone, so will the towns. This trend is most noticeable in the Plains area.
Diana Apr 28th 2011 5:49PM
wow this is very creepy & interesting !
derf Apr 28th 2011 4:38PM
Soon to come; "Most Popular Tent Cities in America".
Louis Apr 28th 2011 4:52PM
If the IDIOTS in Washington keep wasting our resources trying to help, protect,defend, and civilize every country in the Middle East while crime and poverty in the US continue skyrocketing and our economy is getting worse and worse, every city in this country will wind up on this list.
Leo Apr 29th 2011 8:54AM
I heard of one called ^Fordland^ built by Henry Ford in the
Amazon Brazilian State of Pará. I think it was the whole town and some kind of natural
rubber-latex-factory-lab in the middle of the jungle. It has the
^normal^American infra-structure of a cityof 1920's and 30's tottaly
diffrent from what we had or have in Brazil... Maybe you can add this one up
next time ...
http://works.bepress.com/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1003&context=camilo_martinez&sei-redir=1#search=%22fordland%22
Matt Apr 28th 2011 5:34PM
What about Bombay Beach/Salton Sea in California
R. J. Sorensen Apr 28th 2011 5:42PM
Failed to mention Times Beach, MO, SW of St. Louis, near Eureka, Mo, of over 2200 residences.
A largely trailer park summer resort, it was contaminated with PCB and flooded annually by the Meramec river, it was ordered abandoned in the early '80's, and fenced off.
May have become the site of a contaminated waste, high temperature incinerator.
Remember driving by it in the mid '80's. Spooky!
Gerry Apr 28th 2011 5:50PM
The photo image of the Stairway to Hell (Hashima Island ) is an outstanding example of a monocromatic image.
This image would make a great CD cover for any rock group like the Greatful Dead!
If Michael Jackson was still around he would use it for his next video and CD cover.
I would like to order that print, please give me contact information.
Bippy Bellito Apr 28th 2011 6:41PM
Detroit , Dearborne Mich., Camden and Newark NJ look far worse than any of these cities.
Sheryl Apr 28th 2011 8:31PM
You obviously have never been to DEARBORN -- a great city with good restaurants, clean streets, nice neighborhoods. Turn off Fox News and come visit -- I will show you around. Has a university, a thriving downtown, etc.
Leesie Apr 28th 2011 6:03PM
The Featured Photo isn't even mentioned in the article! I guess that city truly is abandoned :)
IamLostRU Apr 28th 2011 6:22PM
Each one seems like something I would like to hear AND SEE more of.
They should provide more images (or links), especially of the things that are not as common as something as the Chernoble area.
Anyone have some of interest?
Cindy Apr 29th 2011 7:15PM
I loved this article! it is so interesting and made me what to investagate more! thanks!
J.E.B. Apr 28th 2011 6:36PM
I have seen the "Destination Truth" episode regarding Pripyat near the Chernobyl Nuclear reactoir that melted down, and it is most cetifiably HAUNTED. I have also seen a few of these other cities on the History Channel, or Discovery Channel, and they are too creepy!
carol dinovo Apr 28th 2011 6:51PM
excellent article, as usual. I look forward to reading anything by Justin Delaney.
Alexi Apr 28th 2011 7:02PM
wow! hunted houses cool i love ghosts i believe they do exist someday i going to visit all the places there i love exploring =)
Jimifan Apr 28th 2011 7:07PM
Mark,
When you said Jackson and Memphis were "Spooky"; were you referring to the number of African-Americans who make up the majority as "spooks"? If so, its not just tacky, and ignorant.
Those who wish to blame Unions for ANYTHING need to read a little history. Unions: The Sorry, Greedy, Worthless, Individuals who put their lives on the line so EVERY hourly worker has the 40 hour workweek and Damn Them, gave us the thing we call "weekends".
Go ahead and slam Unions. Take away the right to collective bargain. Then, sit back and pat yourself on the back as their wages and benefits go...wait a minute. You want me to work Saturday, and Sunday? That's 16 hours Overtime...What? I don't get overtime pay anymore? Well, at least I'll be home by dinner...14 hour days, 7 days a week, with no overtime pay? At least I'll have decent...What? I don't have Dental, alright that's OK; I can live without Dent...Are you kidding me? I don't have ANY medical insurance? What happens to my family if I get sick and can't work?
Politicians might gain points for Union-Bashing, but remember; if history shows us anything, it is politicians are not elected with our puny dollars, but by those interests with deeper pockets than we will ever have. Those are the people who, once the rights of a few have been removed, will seek to remove the rights of one "Special Interest Group" after another until all but a few are truly wage-slaves.
istvan Apr 28th 2011 7:09PM
The writer makes one common mistake: there was no NAZI Army in WWII : it was the GERMAN ARMY ! The Nazi were a political party that took over the Government: The German Government, and ran Germany till 1945. Some in the Army, navy, etc . etc were Nazis , but most were not. The Atrocities therefore, the murder of the millions, were comitted by Germans.