Scary abandoned buildings. Terribly beautiful - the most bewitching abandoned places in the world. Shipwrecks on a sandbar, Bermuda Triangle

Unusual abandoned places around the world

Man has learned to create architectural structures of stunning beauty, hundreds of times larger than himself. And there seems to be no limit to human imagination and human capabilities. The only pity is that nothing lasts forever, and even works of architectural art sooner or later, due to various circumstances, are abandoned by people and given to nature to be torn to pieces. However, such abandoned places have their own charm, and even fascinate with their shabbiness, aloofness, as if they are hiding some secret known only to them.

Today we have collected many similar places from all over the world, not forgetting to mention our favorite abandoned building, for the fate of which we are the whole city ...

Belitz, an abandoned Soviet hospital near Berlin. The city of the same name is located 40 kilometers from the capital of Germany. During the First and Second World Wars, the city-forming hospital was used by the military, and in 1916 Adolf Hitler was treated there. After World War II, the hospital ended up in the zone of Soviet occupation and became the largest Soviet hospital outside the Soviet Union.

The complex is an architectural monument of the Art Nouveau style and consists of 60 buildings, some of which have been restored.

USA, the last house on the Dutch island. This house was once part of a fairly successful island colony in the Chesapeake Bay in the States. However, due to rapid soil erosion, there was less and less space left on the island. The house in the photo was the last one on the island, it collapsed in 2010.

In the twenties of the last century, a resort town appeared on the shores of the salt lake Lago Epecuen, located 600 kilometers southwest of Buenos Aires, in Argentina. It was named Villa Epecuen, and soon its own railway station was built here. For several decades, prosperity reigned in the town. In the 1970s, when the city reached its peak of development, its population was about five thousand people. Around the same period, due to a prolonged cyclone, this hilly region received a much higher amount of precipitation than usual. Because of this, the water level in Lake Lago Epecuen has risen significantly. In 1985, the waters of the lake broke through the earthen dam, and Villa Epekuen was doomed to death. A flurry of floods gradually began to cover the town, until in 1993 the depth reached ten meters (33 feet). Soon the rains stopped, and by 2009 the water began to recede.

For comparison: a photograph of one of the streets of Villa Epecuen in the 1970s and now, after twenty-five years spent under the lake water.

Belgium. It is part of the cooling tower of an abandoned power plant in Monceau. A funnel-shaped structure in the center supplied hot water, which then cooled down by hundreds of small concrete troughs.

Belgium. Cooling chamber.

Namibia, the ghost town of Kolmanskop. This is a small abandoned settlement that flourished in the early 1900s. Then the German settlers started mining diamonds here. The influx of funds ended after the First World War, when the diamond field began to deplete. By the 50s, people completely left the city, and now only tourists and photographers come here.

Russia. Abandoned library. The books were not handed out to schools, they were not sold for nothing to orphanages and boarding schools, provincial houses of culture or vocational schools. They were left as they were - on racks, in a building with a leaky roof, turned off heating, broken windows and an open door.

Australia. Floating forest in Sydney. This is the hull of the large steamship SS Ayrfield, which was decided to be dismantled in Homebush Bay after World War II. But when the shipyard closed, this ship, like several others, remained where they were left. Now it is a beautiful and mysterious floating forest, which serves as an example of the fact that nature can survive anytime and anywhere, even after human activity.

Great Britain. Sea forts of Munsell. These forts were built near the mouths of the Thames and Mersey rivers to protect the country from a potential German air threat during World War II. When they were taken out of service in 1950, several people lived here, including operators of pirate radio stations, and the Principality of Sealand, a self-proclaimed independent state, was also located.

Gulliver Travels Park, Kawaguchi, Japan. The Japanese theme park Gulliver's Kingdom was opened in the vicinity of Mount Fuji in 1997 with public funds, but lasted only four years.

The reason for its collapse was not only financial problems with investors and unpopularity with visitors, but also an initially “bad” place - nearby is a factory that produced sarin for the infamous Aum Senrikyo sect, and the most famous place of pilgrimage for all the unfortunates - Suicide Forest.

House of the Bulgarian Communist Party. The former building of the memorial house, built in the 1980s in honor of the Bulgarian Communist Party, today looks creepy both outside and inside (like a failed regime). This UFO-like structure fell into disrepair after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Now it is just a phantom of the former building, although there is talk of starting restoration work.

Abandoned resort in Croatia in the town of Kupari. The resort, built in the second half of the 20th century, was considered the most luxurious hotel complex in all of Yugoslavia. More than a billion dollars from the country's military budget was invested in the construction.

In 1991, when Croatia was waging a war for independence, the town of Kupari was captured by Serbian troops - after all the hotels were fired from missile frigates and boats, the largest amphibious assault was landed on the beach in front of the resort. The meaning of this operation remained a mystery, shrouded in darkness, but almost everything that was valuable here turned out to be looted. After the war, the resort was never restored: the hotels are in ruins, and only local residents come in the summer to the local beach, which is still considered one of the best in the area.

USA. A deserted island in southeast Florida. These small domed structures were built in 1981 at Cape Romano. They were the summer residence of oil tycoon Bob Lee, but then fell into disrepair. It is still unclear what fate awaits them.

Italy, Sorrento. Abandoned mill. This building in the Valley of the Mills was abandoned in 1866. Once upon a time, wheat was ground here, and there was a sawmill nearby. The mill was isolated from the sea after the construction of Piazzo Tasso, due to which the level of humidity in the region increased, and the mill had to be abandoned.

USA, Detroit. Michigan Central Station. The station was built in 1913 to create a new transport hub. However, several construction errors led to the fact that it had to be closed in 1988.

The fate of Michigan Station has not yet been decided, but it appeared in several films.

Sunken yacht in Antarctica. This eerie ghost ship was the Brazilian yacht Mar Sem Fim, which sank near Ardley Cove. On the yacht, a Brazilian film crew decided to shoot a documentary, but due to strong winds and a storm, water flooded the ship and it sank.

USA. The old abandoned New Bedford Theater in Massachusetts. It was opened in 1912 and closed in 1959. Since then, he managed to visit a supermarket and even a tobacco store. Now a non-profit organization is trying to raise funds to update this building.

Abkhazia, abandoned railway station. This railway station in Sukhumi was abandoned during the Abkhaz war in 1992 and 1993. As a result, this region has become deserted, but the station still retains traces of its former grandeur, such as exquisite stucco.

Russia. Abandoned wooden houses.

These and similar exquisitely decorated towers are located in the Russian hinterland. Some of them are surrounded by forests.

Perhaps it was due to their remoteness that these towers remained untouched.

Eastern China. Underwater city in Shichen. This incredible underwater city, lost in time, is already 1341 years old! Shichen, or Lion City, is located in Zhejiang Province. It was flooded in 1959 during the construction of a hydroelectric power station. The water protects the city from wind and rain erosion, so that it remains in relatively good condition.

USA. Abandoned subway station in New York. This lovely station is right under the city hall. That is why much attention was paid to its design, but because of the neighboring stations, this one never received due attention from the public, and its curved route was considered not safe enough. The station was closed in 1945, and it still remains so, apart from a few exclusive tours for curious visitors.

Columbia, Hotel Salto. Opened in 1928 next to the Tequendama Falls to serve tourists who came to admire the 157-meter waterfall. The hotel was closed in the early 90s after interest in the waterfall faded. But in 2012 this place was turned into a museum.

Ukraine. Abandoned subway tunnel. This photo was taken in the subway near Kiev. Many of the tunnels are partially flooded, and stalactites hang from the ceilings.

Ukraine, Balaklava. Abandoned submarine base. And although it is not completely abandoned, it is still impressive. Before closing in 1993, it was one of the most secret bases in the USSR, and today it is just a museum.

Japan, Hashima Island (jap. “border island”). This island has many names including "Warship" (because of its shape) and "Ghost Island". Previously, it was inhabited and served as a base for workers in underwater coal mines.

As Japan gradually switched from coal to gasoline, the mines (and the buildings that sprang up around them) closed down, leaving behind a ghost island.

Taiwan, Sanzhi. Houses are like UFOs. These flying saucer-like buildings (60 pieces) were originally supposed to be resort houses - in particular, for American military officers serving in Asia. However, due to low levels of investment, the site had to close in 1980 shortly after it was built. Unfortunately, these amazing buildings were demolished in 2010.

They say the only constant in life is change. Literature on history is one way to understand the passage of time, but there are also material monuments that can tell a lot about past times. And if some such places are looked after and taken care of, sometimes it is those that have long been in desolation that are interesting. We bring to your attention some of the most ghostly places around the world, each of which has its own special charm.

Under all this dust, rust and cracks, there are stories of people who once lived here, prayed, and went about their daily business. And when you try to imagine these people and their lives, a special atmosphere and nostalgia is born. It seems that people just recently packed up their things and left. On the other hand, it is interesting to see how some things that once belonged to people are now returning to nature.

Cooling chamber in Belgium.

This is part of the cooling tower of an abandoned power plant in Monceau, Belgium. A funnel-shaped structure in the center supplied hot water, which then cooled down by hundreds of small concrete troughs.

Kolmanskop, Namibia. This is a small abandoned settlement in Namibia that flourished in the early 1900s. Then the German settlers started mining diamonds here. The influx of funds ended after the First World War, when the diamond field began to deplete. By the 1950s, the city was completely abandoned by people, and now only photographers and tourists come here.

Floating forest in Sydney. This is the hull of the large steamship SS Ayrfield, which was decided to be dismantled in Homebush Bay, Australia, after World War II. But when the shipyard closed, this ship, like several others, remained where they had been abandoned. Now it is a beautiful and mysterious floating forest, which serves as an example that nature can survive anytime, anywhere.

Sea forts of Mansell, England. These forts were built near the mouths of the Thames and Mersey rivers in the UK to protect the country from a potential German air threat during World War II. When they were taken out of service in 1950, several people lived here, including operators of pirate radio stations, as well as the Principality of Sealand, a self-proclaimed independent state.

Last home on Dutch Island, USA. This house was once part of a fairly successful island colony in the Chesapeake Bay in the United States. However, due to rapid soil erosion, there was less and less space left on the island. The house pictured was the last one on the island before it collapsed in 2010.

Pripyat, Ukraine. Pripyat is an abandoned city in the north of Ukraine, in the Kyiv region. The city is located on the banks of the Pripyat River, 3 km from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, not far from the border with Belarus. Distance to Kyiv - 94 km. Pripyat was founded on February 4, 1970. The general reason for the founding of the city was the construction and subsequent operation of one of the largest nuclear power plants in Europe, Chernobyl, a city-forming enterprise, which gave Pripyat the title of a city of nuclear scientists. Pripyat became the ninth nuclear town in the Soviet Union.

Many workers of the Chernobyl station lived in Pripyat, the work of which ended in a major disaster in 1986. After the evacuation, Pripyat remains a radioactive ghost town that can only be visited with specialized guides.

House of the Bulgarian Communist Party. The former building of the memorial house, built in the 1980s in honor of the Bulgarian Communist Party, today looks creepy both inside and out. This structure, similar to a flying saucer, fell into disrepair after the collapse of the USSR. Now it is only a ghost of the former building, although there is talk of starting restoration work.

Nara Dreamland amusement park, Japan. The park opened in 1961. But by 2006 it was already closed. It is now a popular spot among the city's "discoverers", although guards periodically patrol the area and impose fines on violators who enter the closed area.

Uninhabited island in southeast Florida, USA. These small domed structures were built in 1981 at Cape Romano, off the coast of the United States. They were the summer residence of oil tycoon Bob Lee, but then fell into disrepair. It is still unclear what fate awaits them.

Abandoned mill, Italy. This building in the Valley of the Mills in Sorrento was abandoned in 1866. Once upon a time, wheat was ground here, and there was a sawmill nearby. The mill was isolated from the sea after the construction of Tasso Square, which raised the level of humidity in the region and forced the mill to be abandoned.

Michigan Central Station in Detroit, USA. The station was built in 1913 to create a new transport hub. However, several construction errors led to the station having to close in 1988.

The fate of the station has not yet been decided, but it appeared in several films, for example, in Eminem's 8 Mile.

Sunken yacht, Antarctica. This spooky ghost ship is the Mar Sem Fim, a Brazilian yacht that sank off Ardley Cove in Antarctica. On the yacht, a Brazilian film crew decided to shoot a documentary, but due to strong winds and a storm, they had to abandon it. The water that got on the ship froze, broke through the hull and sank the yacht.

Abandoned Theater New Bedford, USA. This is an old theater in Massachusetts. It was opened in 1912 and closed in 1959. Since then, he has already managed to visit a tobacco store and a supermarket. Now the non-profit organization is trying to raise funds to renovate the building.

Abandoned railway station, Abkhazia. This station in Sukhumi was abandoned during the war in Abkhazia in 1992 and 1993. As a result of the conflict between Georgia and Russia, this region was abandoned, but the station still has traces of its former greatness, such as amazing stucco.

Abandoned wooden houses, Russia.

All these exquisitely decorated buildings are located in the Russian outback. Some of them are surrounded by forests.

Due to their remoteness, they remained untouched.

Underwater city in Shichen, China. This incredible underwater city, lost in time, is 1341 years old. Shichen, or Lion City, is located in Zhejiang province in eastern China. It was flooded in 1959 during the construction of a hydroelectric power station. The water protects the city from wind and rain erosion, so that it remains in relatively good condition.

Abandoned subway station in New York, USA. This beautiful subway station is right under New York City Hall. That is why much attention was paid to its design, but because of the neighboring stations, this one never received due attention from the public, and its curved route was considered not safe enough. The station closed in 1945 and remains closed to this day, apart from a few exclusive tours for tourists.

Hotel Salto, Colombia. The hotel opened in 1928 next to the Tequendama Falls in Colombia to serve tourists who came to view the 157-meter waterfall. The hotel was closed in the early 90s, after interest in the waterfall faded. But in 2012 this place was turned into a museum.

Abandoned subway tunnel in Kyiv, Ukraine. This photo was taken in the subway near Kiev. Many of the tunnels are partially flooded, and stalactites hang from the ceilings.

Abandoned submarine base in Balaklava, Ukraine. Although this base is not completely abandoned, it is still impressive. Until its closure in 1993, it was one of the most secret bases in the USSR. Today it is the State Maritime Museum.

Abandoned military hospital in Belitz, Germany.

This massive hospital complex would have been built in the late 1800s. In it, Adolf Hitler was recovering from a leg injury sustained during the Battle of the Somme in 1916. Some parts of the complex are still in operation, but most were abandoned after the Russian authorities left the hospital in 1995.

Hashima Island, Japan. This island has many names including Warship (due to its shape) and Ghost Island. From the late 1800s to the late 1900s, the island was inhabited because it gave access to underwater coal mines.

However, as Japan gradually switched from coal to gasoline, the mines (and the buildings that sprang up around them) closed down, leaving behind a ghost island that resembled part of a ghostly warship.

UFO houses in San Zhi, Taiwan. These alien houses in Sanzhi were originally intended to be resort houses, in particular, for US military officers serving in Asia. However, due to low investment and accidents with cars, the site had to close in 1980, shortly after it was built. Unfortunately, these amazing buildings were demolished in 2010.

Abandoned church in the snow.

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website with bated breath presents a selection of the most mysterious places on the planet that cause quiet horror and interest at the same time.

The combination of mystery and danger arouses interest and unwillingly attracts attention, and the view of nature, which calmly captures what people have created, returns us to an understanding of our own insignificance in the face of time.

San Ji ghost town, Taiwan

A luxurious resort on the sea coast was built specifically for the local rich. But already during the construction, a strange thing began. Dozens of workers died: broke their necks, falling from a height (even with safety ropes), died under collapsed cranes. The surrounding residents were sure that the town was inhabited by evil spirits. There were heartbreaking stories about a Japanese "death camp" that was once located there. In the late 1980s, construction stalled. The apartments never found buyers, and the authorities do not demolish the city, because people believe that in this way they will release evil spirits outside.

Abandoned military hospital in Belitz, Germany

The city of the same name is located 40 kilometers from the capital of Germany. During the First and Second World Wars, the hospital was used by the military, and in 1916 Adolf Hitler was treated there. In 1995, people left the city, since then it has been gradually destroyed.

Eighth workshop of the Dagdiesel plant, Makhachkala

Naval weapon test station, commissioned in 1939. It is located at a distance of 2.7 km from the coast and has not been used for a long time. Construction was carried out for a long time and was complicated by difficult conditions. Unfortunately, the workshop did not serve the plant for long. The requirements for the work carried out in the workshop changed, and in April 1966 this grandiose structure was written off from the factory balance. Now this “Massiv” is abandoned and stands in the Caspian Sea, resembling an ancient monster from the shore.

Lier Sikehus Psychiatric Hospital, Norway

The Norwegian psychiatric hospital, which is located in the small town of Lier, half an hour from Oslo, has a dark past. Once, experiments were carried out on patients here, and for unknown reasons, four buildings of the hospital were abandoned in 1985. Equipment, beds, even magazines and personal belongings of patients remained in the abandoned buildings. At the same time, the remaining eight buildings of the hospital are still working today.

Gunkanjima Island, Japan

In fact, the island is called Hashima, nicknamed Gunkanjima, which means "cruiser island". The island was settled in 1810 when coal was found there. Within fifty years, it has become the most populated island in the world in terms of the ratio of land and the number of inhabitants on it: 5300 people with a radius of the island itself of one kilometer. By 1974, the reserves of coal and other minerals on Gankajima were finally exhausted, and people left the island. Today, visiting the island is prohibited. There are many legends about this place among the people.

Kowloon Walled City, Hong Kong, China

The city was in Hong Kong, but did not obey the authorities, being run by the mafia. Inside, not only prostitution and drug trafficking flourished, but there was also self-government. In addition, the region had its own industry: semi-handicraft production of noodles and all sorts of small things. The products of enterprises were inexpensive: there were no taxes, and local entrepreneurs did not comply with labor laws. They had their own nursing home, kindergarten and school. In the early 1990s, the population density reached two million people per square kilometer.

After a complex process of eviction of the people living there, in 1995 a park of the same name was opened on this site. Some of the city's historical artifacts, including the yamen building, and the remains of the South Gate have been preserved.

Abandoned Salto Hotel in Colombia

In 1924, the luxurious Refugio El Salto was built in the city of San Antonio del Tekendama. After some time, the hotel was closed due to the increasing cases of suicides of visitors. Sinister legends and rumors circulate around this place.

Church of San Juan Parangaricutiro, Mexico

The church, located in the village of the same name, was buried under the lava of the Paricutin volcano in 1944, the village was completely destroyed. Miraculously, the altar and the church bell tower remained untouched, surrounded by the ruins of the temple complex, protruding cones of solidified lava resemble foreign paintings.

The underwater city of Shichen in China

Ghost town Kolmanskop, Namibia

The ghost town of Kolmanskop, built in a place where small diamonds were found in the sand, which the wind brought from the ocean. Large beautiful houses, a school, a hospital, a stadium were built in the city, and the settlement quickly turned into an exemplary German city. Everyone counted on long-term prosperity, but alas, the “diamond supply” quickly dried up. In addition, it was hard to live in the city due to problems with water and sandstorms, and people left it. Most of the houses are almost completely covered with sand and make a depressing impression.

When watching horror movies, we sometimes wonder what we would do if we woke up in one of these abandoned creepy places. Some abandoned and creepy places you can visit, just like the photographers who took these shots. List of the scariest and most abandoned places in the world that you might not know about.

10 PHOTOS

This cemetery was already overcrowded in the 15th century and the dead were buried in layers on top of each other. In total, there are about 12,000 tombstones in the cemetery, but about 90,000 more burials are underground.


Despite the fact that this place gathers pilgrims from all over the world, it looks creepy, especially at night. In total, about 100 thousand crosses can be counted in the cemetery.


This metro station was closed in 1945. In New York, this place is considered one of the creepiest.


The map of Kyiv will not help you if you want to find this place. Only professional diggers can lead you through abandoned tunnels.


These beautiful colorful houses in San Zhi were intended for the residence of American military agents. However, the city was closed in 1980 and the project for the construction of houses was frozen.


Hashima Island or Ghost Island looks like a zombie camp. The island lived by mining coal, but as soon as the industry fell into decay, people were forced to leave this place.


7. Ruins of the Kingdom of Gulliver, Japan.

This theme park was opened in 1997 only to be abandoned 10 years later.


Beelitz-Heilstätten is a hospital complex in Beelitz that remains one of the most enigmatic historical medical institutions. It was in it that Adolf Hitler was treated.


9. Object 825GTS - Abandoned submarine base in Balaklava, Ukraine. 10. Hotel Salto, Colombia.

Look at this creepy place. Fog, green moss, an old abandoned building that does not look like a hotel. However, this is a former hotel that closed in the early 90s and became a museum in 2012.

Mysterious and attractive places: you can shoot picturesque thrillers in them. Our country is beautiful and huge so that few people can seriously imagine its scale. And almost everywhere: from Sakhalin to Kaliningrad, people live who eventually leave their homes for various reasons. Even in the middle of a busy city, you can find a forgotten corner, and deserted villages are scattered throughout the country.

Here is a list of the ten most romantic and eerie places that no longer have people.
Nuclear lighthouse at Cape Aniva (Sakhalin)



The lighthouse was built with great difficulty in 1939 according to the project of the architect Miura Shinobu, it was a unique and most complex technical structure in all of Sakhalin. It operated on a diesel generator and backup batteries until the early nineties, and after it was re-equipped. Thanks to the atomic energy source, maintenance costs were minimal, but soon there were no funds left for this - the building was empty, and in 2006 the military removed two isotope installations that powered the lighthouse from here. Once it shone for 17.5 miles, but now it has been plundered and fallen into disrepair.

Fairy tale castle in Zaklyuche



It can be found in a picturesque forest area, on the high bank of a small lake, between Moscow and St. Petersburg. Manor of the architect A.S. Khrenova was built at the end of the 19th century according to his own design. A distinctive feature of the house is complete asymmetry, as well as a combination of natural and artificial materials during construction. What you see is either a medieval castle, or a classic city estate, in which there was a sanatorium in Soviet times. Currently, the house is being restored very slowly, so it cannot be considered completely abandoned.

Five-star hotel "Northern Crown"


The construction of the Northern Crown Hotel began in 1988 by a Yugoslav company. They wanted to build a five-star hotel with 247 rooms with a total area of ​​about 50,000 square meters. m. Construction work stopped at the end of 1995, when the object was almost ready. It has been going to be demolished for several years, but still nothing. And so it stands, damp, attracting outsiders with its roof of unusual configuration, light interiors and mold on plasterboard stucco molding.

Eighth workshop of the Dagdiesel plant, Kaspiysk


Naval weapon test station, commissioned in 1939. It is located at a distance of 2.7 km from the coast and has not been used for a long time. Construction was carried out for a long time and was complicated by difficult conditions: the foundation was made on the shore, and then delivered to the construction site. The walls are 14 meters deep and 1.5 meters thick. Unfortunately, the workshop did not serve the plant for long. The requirements for the work carried out in the workshop changed, and in April 1966 this grandiose structure was written off from the factory balance. Now this “Massiv” is abandoned and stands in the Caspian Sea, resembling an ancient monster from the shore.

Diamond quarry "Mir", Yakutia


In 2004, open pit diamond mining ended and the mine reached 525 meters deep and 1,200 meters wide, making it the second largest excavated hole in the world after the Bingham Canyon mine. The hole is so large that the airspace above the shaft is closed to helicopters due to accidents in which they were sucked into the downdraft. The landscape around looks deserted and completely alien.

Khovrinskaya hospital, Moscow


A huge multi-story hospital began to be built on the site of the cemetery in 1980, and construction was stopped five years later. Now the cellars are flooded, and the building is slowly sinking underground. "HZB", "Umbrella", "Unfinished", "Nemostor": the place is more than famous, overgrown with a huge number of urban legends and attracts a variety of personalities. The resident of evil and the gate to a parallel world in the middle of Moscow. Popular with young thrill-seekers, and already has its own folklore and "locals".

The village of Kadykchan, Magadan region



Kadykchan (translated from the Evenki language - "Valley of Death"), the settlement was built by prisoners. In January 1986, the population was 10,270 people, and by 2006 there were not even a thousand left; in 2012, one elderly man lived here. Coal was mined here, due to which most of the Magadan region received energy, but after the explosion at the mine, people began to leave, the village was closed and disconnected from heat and electricity. Now it is an abandoned mining "ghost town". Books and furniture have been preserved in the houses, cars in the garages, the streets of five-story buildings are gradually being destroyed.

Abandoned naval submarine base Bechevinka


Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky-54, Finval Bay was founded in the 1960s as a military camp, a base for submariners. Once a week a ship went to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, there was no land communication with other settlements. The brigade was completely disbanded in 1996. All military equipment was removed, electricity and water supply were cut off. Simultaneously with the village of Bechevinka, the Shipunsky missile settlement, located on a hill on the other side of the bay, ceased to exist. The village is surrounded by mountains and the incredible beauty of Kamchatka.

Building of the sanatorium "Energy" in the Moscow region