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Seasoned ExplorerUploaded a total of 100 pins to Urbex PlanetEarned 10/22/2025 -
Halloween 2025Awarded to explorers who were active during the spooky season of Halloween 2025. A limited-time commemorative badge for those brave enough to explore haunted locations! 👻🎃Earned 10/27/2025
Submitted Locations (36)
| Name | Description | Visibility | Collection |
|---|---|---|---|
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Submitted Nov 22, 2025 at 12:32 PM• 21 days ago
Updated Nov 22, 2025 at 12:47 PM
• 21 days ago
|
The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant remains the silent epicenter of the world’s worst nuclear disaster. On 26 April 1986, Reactor No. 4 exploded during a botched safety test, spewing radioactive fallout across Europe and forcing the permanent evacuation of hundreds of thousands. The shattered reactor hall is now entombed beneath the gleaming steel arches of the New Safe Confinement (completed 2016), a €2.1 billion shield designed to contain radiation for the next century. Units 1–3 operated until 2000; their smokestacks and turbine halls still stand, eerily intact yet lethally contaminated. Visible from kilometers away, the sarcophagus and its silent neighbor reactors are the Zone’s most restricted and iconic sight, viewable only from designated observation points on official guided tours. | public | -- |
|
Submitted Nov 22, 2025 at 12:28 PM• 21 days ago
Updated Nov 22, 2025 at 12:29 PM
• 21 days ago
|
Towering over the dense pine forests of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone at coordinates, the Duga-3 radar array, known to the West as the “Russian Woodpecker” stands as a colossal relic of Cold War paranoia. This 150-meter-tall, 500-meter-wide over-the-horizon radar antenna, built between 1972 and 1976, once blasted powerful shortwave signals across the globe to detect incoming ICBMs, creating the infamous tapping interference that disrupted radio broadcasts worldwide. Nicknamed for its repetitive “woodpecker” noise, the secretive Soviet steel lattice part of the Chernobyl-2 military garrison ceased operation the moment Reactor No. 4 exploded nearby in 1986. Today, its rusting skeleton looms silently above hidden bunkers and abandoned control rooms, reachable only on official guided tours through the Zone. Climbing restrictions keep visitors at ground level, yet standing beneath its sheer scale remains one of the most awe-inspiring and unsettling experiences in Pripyat’s ghostly landscape. | public | -- |
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Submitted Nov 22, 2025 at 11:54 AM• 21 days ago
Updated Nov 22, 2025 at 12:02 PM
• 21 days ago
|
Located at the very heart of Pripyat’s abandoned city center, the Pripyat Amusement Park stands as the most haunting symbol of the Chernobyl disaster; its rusting Ferris wheel, bumper cars, and swing ride frozen mid-motion since the park was scheduled to open just five days after the 1986 explosion. Built in 1986 to celebrate the May Day holiday for the young families of Chernobyl’s workers, this small Soviet-era funfair never heard the laughter it was meant for; instead, the evacuation on 27 April left dolls on carousels, tickets in booths, and radioactive dust settling over bright yellow paint now peeling into silence. Overgrown birch trees push through cracked asphalt, and the iconic 26-meter Ferris wheel never turned for paying guests has become the universal postcard of nuclear tragedy. Accessible only on official guided tours through the Exclusion Zone, it remains one of the most poignant and photographed corners of Pripyat, where the ghosts of an ordinary Soviet childhood linger beneath the Geiger counter’s quiet clicks. | public | -- |
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Submitted Nov 22, 2025 at 11:31 AM• 21 days ago
Updated Nov 22, 2025 at 11:46 AM
• 21 days ago
|
Frozen in time at the heart of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone in northern Ukraine, Pripyat stands as the world’s most iconic abandoned city; a meticulously planned Soviet “atomgrad” founded in 1970 to house 50,000 workers of the nearby Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant and their families. Evacuated 36 hours after Reactor No. 4 exploded on 26 April 1986, its apartment blocks, schools, hospital, amusement park with its motionless Ferris wheel, and the azure swimming pool remain eerily untouched, preserved by radiation rather than restoration. Overgrown forests reclaim streets once filled with children’s laughter, while peeling propaganda murals and scattered gas masks whisper of sudden catastrophe. Now a tightly controlled tourist destination accessible only through official guided tours from Kyiv, Pripyat offers a haunting, poignant glimpse into a vanished era; where nature and decay have merged with mid 20th century Soviet ambition, creating one of the most powerful monuments to human hubris on Earth. | public | -- |
|
Submitted Nov 17, 2025 at 7:46 PM• a month ago
Updated Nov 17, 2025 at 7:49 PM
• a month ago
|
Rays Hill Tunnel (West Portal), PA abandoned turnpike: 3,532-ft relic abandoned 1968. Mossy arched entrance reclaimed by woods, pitch-black tube filled with echoes, scattered debris & fading graffiti on this ghostly stretch of old PA Turnpike. | public | -- |
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Submitted Nov 17, 2025 at 7:44 PM• a month ago
Updated Nov 17, 2025 at 7:50 PM
• a month ago
|
Rays Hill Tunnel (East Portal), PA abandoned turnpike: 3,532-ft dark bore frozen since 1968 bypass. Cracked concrete arch swallowed by forest, graffiti-splashed walls & leaf-covered road inside this silent sibling to Sideling Hill on the lost PA Turnpike. | public | -- |
|
Submitted Nov 17, 2025 at 7:38 PM• a month ago
Updated Nov 17, 2025 at 7:40 PM
• a month ago
|
Sideling Hill Tunnel (West End), PA abandoned turnpike: mirror-image 4,300-ft bore abandoned since 1968. Vines swallow the cracked portal, debris-strewn tubes echo with dripping water & distant birds. Eerie twin to the east end on this lost stretch of PA Turnpike. | public | -- |
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Submitted Nov 17, 2025 at 7:36 PM• a month ago
Updated Nov 17, 2025 at 7:42 PM
• a month ago
|
Sideling Hill Tunnel (East End), PA abandoned turnpike: 4,300-ft twin-bore relic bypassed in 1968. Graffiti-lit portals, crumbling asphalt & eerie silence now rule this Cold War-era PA Turnpike ghost road, frozen in time amid dense forest. | public | -- |
|
Submitted Nov 12, 2025 at 3:39 PM• a month ago
Updated Nov 12, 2025 at 3:40 PM
• a month ago
|
Nestled on the rugged cliffs of the Beara Peninsula in West Cork, Ireland, the ruins of this mid-19th-century Famine cottage stand as a somber testament to An Gorta Mór, the Great Famine that claimed over a million lives between 1845 and 1852. Once a humble stone homestead for tenant farmers eking out a subsistence on marginal, windswept land, it was likely abandoned amid the potato blight, widespread starvation, and brutal evictions that decimated rural communities in this remote corner of County Cork. Today, the site reveals weathered walls and scattered foundations half-swallowed by gorse and heather, just a short hike from the Napoleonic-era Old Signal Tower and overlooking the dramatic Dursey Sound. Accessible via the unmarked L8901 road, this fragile relic invites mindful explorers to contemplate Ireland's resilient spirit, urging visitors to tread lightly and preserve its poignant silence as a window into a nation's enduring scars. | public | -- |
Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant
The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant remains the silent epicenter of the world’s worst nuclear disaster. On 26 April 1986, Reactor No. 4 exploded during a botched safety test, spewing radioactive fallout across Europe and forcing the permanent evacuation of hundreds of thousands. The shattered reactor hall is now entombed beneath the gleaming steel arches of the New Safe Confinement (completed 2016), a €2.1 billion shield designed to contain radiation for the next century. Units 1–3 operated until 2000; their smokestacks and turbine halls still stand, eerily intact yet lethally contaminated. Visible from kilometers away, the sarcophagus and its silent neighbor reactors are the Zone’s most restricted and iconic sight, viewable only from designated observation points on official guided tours.
Duga-3 radar array (РЛС 5Н32 Дуга)
Towering over the dense pine forests of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone at coordinates, the Duga-3 radar array, known to the West as the “Russian Woodpecker” stands as a colossal relic of Cold War paranoia. This 150-meter-tall, 500-meter-wide over-the-horizon radar antenna, built between 1972 and 1976, once blasted powerful shortwave signals across the globe to detect incoming ICBMs, creating the infamous tapping interference that disrupted radio broadcasts worldwide. Nicknamed for its repetitive “woodpecker” noise, the secretive Soviet steel lattice part of the Chernobyl-2 military garrison ceased operation the moment Reactor No. 4 exploded nearby in 1986. Today, its rusting skeleton looms silently above hidden bunkers and abandoned control rooms, reachable only on official guided tours through the Zone. Climbing restrictions keep visitors at ground level, yet standing beneath its sheer scale remains one of the most awe-inspiring and unsettling experiences in Pripyat’s ghostly landscape.
Pripyat Amusement Park
Located at the very heart of Pripyat’s abandoned city center, the Pripyat Amusement Park stands as the most haunting symbol of the Chernobyl disaster; its rusting Ferris wheel, bumper cars, and swing ride frozen mid-motion since the park was scheduled to open just five days after the 1986 explosion. Built in 1986 to celebrate the May Day holiday for the young families of Chernobyl’s workers, this small Soviet-era funfair never heard the laughter it was meant for; instead, the evacuation on 27 April left dolls on carousels, tickets in booths, and radioactive dust settling over bright yellow paint now peeling into silence. Overgrown birch trees push through cracked asphalt, and the iconic 26-meter Ferris wheel never turned for paying guests has become the universal postcard of nuclear tragedy. Accessible only on official guided tours through the Exclusion Zone, it remains one of the most poignant and photographed corners of Pripyat, where the ghosts of an ordinary Soviet childhood linger beneath the Geiger counter’s quiet clicks.
Pripyat
Frozen in time at the heart of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone in northern Ukraine, Pripyat stands as the world’s most iconic abandoned city; a meticulously planned Soviet “atomgrad” founded in 1970 to house 50,000 workers of the nearby Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant and their families. Evacuated 36 hours after Reactor No. 4 exploded on 26 April 1986, its apartment blocks, schools, hospital, amusement park with its motionless Ferris wheel, and the azure swimming pool remain eerily untouched, preserved by radiation rather than restoration. Overgrown forests reclaim streets once filled with children’s laughter, while peeling propaganda murals and scattered gas masks whisper of sudden catastrophe. Now a tightly controlled tourist destination accessible only through official guided tours from Kyiv, Pripyat offers a haunting, poignant glimpse into a vanished era; where nature and decay have merged with mid 20th century Soviet ambition, creating one of the most powerful monuments to human hubris on Earth.
Rays Hill Tunnel West Portal
Rays Hill Tunnel (West Portal), PA abandoned turnpike: 3,532-ft relic abandoned 1968. Mossy arched entrance reclaimed by woods, pitch-black tube filled with echoes, scattered debris & fading graffiti on this ghostly stretch of old PA Turnpike.
Rays Hill Tunnel East Portal
Rays Hill Tunnel (East Portal), PA abandoned turnpike: 3,532-ft dark bore frozen since 1968 bypass. Cracked concrete arch swallowed by forest, graffiti-splashed walls & leaf-covered road inside this silent sibling to Sideling Hill on the lost PA Turnpike.
Sideling Hill Tunnel, West End
Sideling Hill Tunnel (West End), PA abandoned turnpike: mirror-image 4,300-ft bore abandoned since 1968. Vines swallow the cracked portal, debris-strewn tubes echo with dripping water & distant birds. Eerie twin to the east end on this lost stretch of PA Turnpike.
Sideling Hill Tunnel, East End
Sideling Hill Tunnel (East End), PA abandoned turnpike: 4,300-ft twin-bore relic bypassed in 1968. Graffiti-lit portals, crumbling asphalt & eerie silence now rule this Cold War-era PA Turnpike ghost road, frozen in time amid dense forest.
Famine Cottage
Nestled on the rugged cliffs of the Beara Peninsula in West Cork, Ireland, the ruins of this mid-19th-century Famine cottage stand as a somber testament to An Gorta Mór, the Great Famine that claimed over a million lives between 1845 and 1852. Once a humble stone homestead for tenant farmers eking out a subsistence on marginal, windswept land, it was likely abandoned amid the potato blight, widespread starvation, and brutal evictions that decimated rural communities in this remote corner of County Cork. Today, the site reveals weathered walls and scattered foundations half-swallowed by gorse and heather, just a short hike from the Napoleonic-era Old Signal Tower and overlooking the dramatic Dursey Sound. Accessible via the unmarked L8901 road, this fragile relic invites mindful explorers to contemplate Ireland's resilient spirit, urging visitors to tread lightly and preserve its poignant silence as a window into a nation's enduring scars.