List of abandoned villages in Russia - for those who could not decide to leave the city. Ghost towns in Russia: a list and photos of dead cities for independent visit

In Russia itself there are many cities, towns and villages. These settlements are simply abandoned by people. And such a large number is not only surprising, but even frightening. Arriving at such ghost places, you can feel vague feelings and see the real story. Here, the atmosphere that was throughout the vast country several decades ago has been preserved. Ghost towns haunt today's civilization and leave a legacy in the past. Only now they are completely deserted. A ghost town in Russia is no longer a new concept. Many people know about the existence of such places, and their mystery and mystery attract curious tourists.

abandoned cities

Arriving in such a city, you may get the impression that you are the only one, and all people have died out, as if you are on a deserted planet, on which life and civilization once reigned a very long time ago. Why such abandoned cities attract the attention of many people.

Video about abandoned cities in Russia

In our time, it has become quite a popular form of recreation to visit places where life reigned a few decades ago. On the border of two millennia, these special places have become of interest to many tourists who prefer an extreme and original form of recreation.

The sights of many countries and cities have become so boring for tourists that many choose the option of visiting cities in which people do not live at all at the moment. Visiting ghost towns has become especially popular among active tourists, due to the fact that everyone has the opportunity to become a real explorer who has the opportunity to discover something new and non-standard.

It is the cities destroyed and abandoned by people that are a kind of mystery that attracts tourists who want not only to take a break from the hectic life and busy people in a quiet place, but also to combine such a vacation with the opportunity to become a real discoverer or archaeologist who finds ancient civilizations. For history buffs, visiting ghost towns is one of the most captivating moments.

In fact, throughout the Russian Federation there is a huge number of deserted places where life was in full swing several decades ago. Such ghosts give the impression that time has stopped. Here are some examples of these mysterious places:

  • Republic of Komi - Khalmer-Yu;
  • Perm Territory - Staraya Gubakha;
  • Magadan region - Kadykchan;
  • Yaroslavl region - Mologa;
  • Chukotka Autonomous Okrug - Iultin.

These are the most famous places, ghost towns abandoned by locals, now no one lives here. Each of these places has its own peculiarity and.

Halmer-Yu

This abandoned place is currently a training ground for the military. But earlier local residents buried their dead here.


The very name of this town comes from the German word and means "Dead River". A rather unusual place was inhabited until 1993, but after that the mine located here was liquidated, and the entire local population was forced to leave for the large city of Vorkuta. This is how abandoned cities appear.

Old Gubakha

This mysterious place was inhabited by people who were engaged in coal mining. The deposit was discovered in 1721.


Until 1994, some mines were still active, but over time they were completely closed. Now few people live here, all the buildings are covered with dense vegetation, only a few have summer cottages in this place. Nobody comes here for a long time, as this place is very close to the industrial and factory zone.

Even abandoned cities have attractions. For example, in this village there is a cave called "Mariinsky", it is still known among tourists.

Kadykchan

This place is the most popular among all the ghost towns in the Magadan region. Such a unique name has an extraordinary meaning, because if you look at the translation of this word from the Evenk language, it means "Death Valley".


Only about thirty years ago, about ten thousand inhabitants lived in this village. Interestingly, the history of its founding was laid down by political prisoners who built this city. Abandoned places are reminiscent of the fact that in the 90s people worked here, and there was an active mine. But due to an accident that occurred at this mine, in which six people died, the local population began to be diligently evicted. This has led to the fact that at the moment only one resident lives here, who fundamentally does not want to leave his native place.

Mologa

Today, nothing says that several centuries ago these places were the center of trade, which attracted thousands of people. This city is located at the confluence of the Mologa River into the Volga River. This, in our time, flooded, the city is located 32 kilometers from the city of Rybinsk. The history of the city of Mologa goes back to the end of the 12th century.


Having existed for eight centuries, Mologa numbered 5,000 people. Due to the decision of the government of the Soviet Union, this city rich in history was flooded. In 1935, it was decided to build a Rybinsk hydroelectric complex on this site. Local residents were not explained the reason for their eviction, it was forced and forced. Work began to be carried out, knowing that about three hundred people refused to evacuate from their native and dear places. In our time, the flooded city rises from under the water twice a year when the water level in the reservoir drops.

This example once again shows how abandoned cities can remind of their former existence from year to year.

Iultin

In Chukotka, Iultin was the main center for tin mining. This village was founded in 1953. Since the climate here is quite severe, deliveries came with great difficulty. Therefore, already in 1994, people gradually began to leave it. And subsequently Iultin ceased to exist as a residential village. In addition to the population, production also ceased to exist, since it gave almost no profit.


By the beginning of the twenty-first century, this city had completely died out, and today it is considered an uninhabited ghost town, in which there is something that reminds of the past human stay.

Abandoned by their extraordinary mystery. Therefore, you can go here in order to feel the spirit of history and mystery.

On our planet, there are a huge number of ghost towns, empty and creepy, frightening a traveler who accidentally wandered here, with empty eye sockets of windows of rickety buildings ...
In this ranking, we will present the 10 most famous abandoned cities abandoned by people for various reasons: some were abandoned due to bloody wars, others were abandoned under the onslaught of almighty nature.

1. The city of Kolmanskop, buried in the sands (Namibia)

Kolmanskop

Kolmanskop is an abandoned town in southern Namibia, located a few kilometers from the port of Lüderitz.
In 1908, Zakaris Leval, an employee of the railway company, discovered small diamonds in the sand. This discovery caused a real diamond rush and thousands of people rushed to the hot sands of the Namib Desert, hoping to make a fortune.

Kolmanskop was built in record time. It took people only two years to erect beautiful German-style residential buildings in the desert, rebuild a school, a hospital, and even a casino. But the city's days were already numbered.

After the end of the First World War, the cost of diamonds on the world market fell, and every year the production of precious stones in the mines of Kolmanskop became worse and worse. The lack of drinking water and the constant struggle with the sand dunes made the life of the people of the mining town increasingly unbearable.

In the 1950s, the last inhabitants left Kolmanskop and it turned into another ghost town on the world map. Soon, nature and the desert almost completely buried the town under the sand dunes. A few more old houses and the theater building remained unburied, which is still in good condition.

2. City of nuclear scientists Pripyat (Ukraine)

Pripyat is an abandoned city in the "exclusion zone" in northern Ukraine. Workers and scientists of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant lived here until the tragic day - April 26, 1986. On this day, the explosion of the 4th power unit of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant put an end to the further existence of the city.

On April 27, the evacuation of people from Pripyat began. Nuclear workers and their families were allowed to take with them only the most necessary things and documents, all the property acquired over the years, people left in their abandoned apartments. Over time, Pripyat turned into a ghost town, visited only by extreme and thrill-seekers.

For those who want to see and appreciate the full scale of the disaster, the Pripyat-Tour company provides excursions to an abandoned city. Due to the high level of radiation, you can safely stay here for no more than a few hours, and most likely, Pripyat will forever remain a dead city.

3 Futuristic San Zhi Resort City (Taiwan)

In the north of Taiwan, not far from the capital of the state, the city of Taipei, there is a ghost town of San Zhi. According to the idea of ​​the developers, very wealthy people should have bought these houses, because the very architecture of the buildings, made in a futuristic style, was so unusual and revolutionary that it should have attracted a large number of wealthy customers.

But during the construction of the city, inexplicable accidents began to occur here, and every week there were more and more of them, until the death of workers began to happen every day. Rumor quickly spread the news of a bad city, which had a very bad effect on the reputation of the city for the rich.

The construction was finally completed and even a grand opening was held, but none of the potential customers bought a home here. Massive advertising campaigns and huge discounts did not help, Sang Chih became the new ghost town. Now access is prohibited here, and local residents believe that the city is inhabited by the ghosts of people who died here.

4. The medieval city of Craco (Italy)

About forty kilometers from the Gulf of Taranto in Italy, is the abandoned ancient city of Krako. Situated on picturesque hills, it was the patrimony of farmers and plowmen, its inhabitants were engaged in agriculture, growing wheat and other crops.

The first mention of the city dates back to 1060, when the entire land was owned by the Catholic Archbishop Arnaldo.
In 1981, the population of Krako was just over 2,000 people, and since 1982, due to poor harvests, landslides and constant landslides, the population of the town began to decline rapidly. Between 1892 and 1922, more than 1,300 people left Kracko. Some left to seek happiness in America, others settled in neighboring towns and villages.

The city was finally abandoned after a strong earthquake in 1963, only a few residents remained to while away their lives in the new ghost town. By the way, it was here that Mel Gibson filmed the scene of the execution of Judas for his masterpiece film The Passion of the Christ.

5. The village of Oradour-sur-Glan (France) - a memorial reminiscent of the horrors of fascism

The small ruined village of Oradour-sur-Glan in France stands as a reminder of the monstrous atrocities of the Nazis. During World War II, 642 villagers were brutally murdered by the Nazis as punishment for the capture of SS-Sturmbannführer Helmut Kampf by French resistance fighters.

According to one version, the Nazis simply confused the villages with consonant names.
A high-ranking fascist was in captivity in the neighboring village of Oradur-sur-Vaires. The Germans did not spare anyone - neither the elderly, nor women, nor children ... They drove the men to the sheds, where they accurately beat their legs with machine guns, then doused them with a combustible mixture and set them on fire.

Women, children and old people were locked in the church, then a powerful incendiary device was blown up. People tried to get out of the burning building, but they were mercilessly shot by German machine gunners. Then the Nazis completely destroyed the village.

6. Forbidden Island Gankanjima (Japan)

Gankanjima Island is one of the 505 uninhabited islands in Nagasaki Prefecture, and is located only 15 km from Nagasaki itself. It is also called Battleship Island because of the walls that protect the city from the sea. The history of the settlement of the island began in 1890, when coal was discovered here. Mitsubishi bought the entire area and began to implement a project to extract coal from the bottom of the sea.

In 1916, the first large concrete building was built on the island, and then the buildings began to grow like mushrooms after the rain. And in 1959, the population of the island grew so much that 835 people lived here on one hectare! It was a world record for population density.

In the early 1960s, oil in Japan increasingly began to displace coal in production, its extraction became unprofitable. Coal mines began to close all over the country, and the mines of Gankanjima were no exception.

In 1974, Mitsubishi officially announced the closure of the mines and the cessation of all activities on the island. Gankanjima has become another abandoned ghost town. Currently, visiting the island is prohibited, and in 2003, the famous Japanese action movie Battle Royale was filmed here.

7. Kadykchan - a village in the Magadan region

Kadykchan is an urban-type settlement located in the Susumansky district of the Magadan region. One of the most famous abandoned northern villages on the Internet. In 1986, according to the census, 10,270 people lived here, and in 2002 - only 875. In Soviet times, coal of the highest quality was mined here, which was used to heat almost 2/3 of the Magadan region.

The population of Kadykchan began to decrease rapidly after the mine explosion in 1996. A few years later, the only boiler house heating the village also thawed, and it became simply impossible to live here.

Now it's just a ghost town, one of many in Russia. There are rusty cars in the garages, destroyed furniture, books and children's toys in the rooms. Finally, leaving the dying village, the inhabitants shot the bust of V.I. Lenin installed on the square.

8. The walled city of Kowloon (Hong Kong) - a city of lawlessness and anarchy

One of the most incredible ghost towns that no longer exist is the city of Kowloon, which was located near the former Kaitak Airport, a city where all the vices and base passions of mankind were embodied. In the 1980s, more than 50,000 people lived here.
Probably, there was no longer a place on the planet where prostitution, drug addiction, gambling and underground workshops were ubiquitous.

It was practically impossible to take a step here without running into a drug addict pumped up with dope, or a prostitute who offered her services for a pittance. The authorities of Hong Kong practically did not control the city, there was the highest crime rate in the country.

Eventually, in 1993, the entire population of Kowloon was evicted and briefly became a ghost town. The incredible and creepy settlement was then demolished, and a park of the same name was laid out in its place.

9. The abandoned ghost town of Varosha (Cyprus)

Varosha is a district of Famagusta, a city in Northern Cyprus founded in the 3rd century AD. Until 1974, Varosha was a real "Mecca" for beach lovers. Thousands of tourists from all over the world flocked here to soak up the gentle rays of the Cypriot sun. They say that the Germans and the British booked places in luxury hotels for 20 years ahead!

The resort prospered, building up with new hotels and villas, until everything changed in 1974. That year, the Turks invaded Varosha with NATO support to protect the Turkish minority of Cypriot residents from persecution of ethnic Greeks.

Since then, the Varosha quarter has become a ghost town, surrounded by barbed wire, where the Turkish military has not let anyone in for four decades. The houses are dilapidated, the windows are shattered, and the streets of the once bustling quarter are in total ruin. Apartments and shops are empty and completely looted first by the Turkish military and then by local looters.

10. The Lost City of Agdam (Azerbaijan)

Agdam, a city that was once famous for its wine throughout the Soviet Union, is now dead and uninhabited... The war in Nagorno-Karabakh, which lasted from 1990 to 1994, did not give a chance to exist to the flat city, where excellent cheese was previously brewed and the best port wine in the Union.
The collapse of the USSR led to the outbreak of hostilities in many former republics.

Azerbaijan did not escape this either, the fighters of which were able to seize wagons with rockets located not far from Aghdam. It turned out to be very convenient for them to bomb the Armenian Stepanakert. Such actions eventually led to a sad ending.

In the summer of 1993, Agdam was surrounded by 6,000 soldiers of the Liberation Army of Nagorno-Karabakh. With the support of helicopters and tanks, the Armenians practically wiped out the hated city, and the approaches to it were carefully mined. Therefore, until now, visiting the ghost town of Agdam is not safe for life.

Few people know, but the abandoned cities in computer games are mostly “copied” from real landscapes. In the vastness of the Russian Federation, you can find many abandoned settlements, from the sight of which the blood runs cold. The current ghost towns of Russia have become victims of economic recession, natural or man-made disasters.

The only visitors today are wild animals and rare Post Apocalypse style photographers. The editors have prepared a selection of the most frightening ghost towns in Russia.

Revenge of nature

The progress of the 20th century turned out to be sad consequences for the Earth. Man-made disasters, soil and air pollution, uncontrolled extraction of minerals and raw materials - all this has given rise to ghost towns in Russia. There is even a hypothesis among scientists that the Earth is self-purifying, arranging destructive earthquakes and floods.


Neftegorsk is once a booming city of oil workers on Sakhalin Island. It was razed to the ground by a devastating earthquake on May 28, 1995. The strength of the tremors was 9 points. 2,040 people died under the ruins of their houses. Now, on the site of the once prosperous city of oil workers, there are ruins, over which a gloomy memorial complex rises.

Kursha-2


You can make an apocalyptic horror film based on the history of the Ryazan workers' settlement Kursha-2. The settlement was completely destroyed by hellfire on August 3, 1938. Of the 1200 people miraculously survived, about 20 lucky ones.

On an ill-fated day, a rescue train carrying timber arrived in the village. The head of the freight train, seeing the impending fire, offered to evacuate people. However, the dispatcher gave the order to save the forest, making a fatal mistake. People barely had time to load the blanks and climb the logs. It seemed that salvation was near, but a burning bridge stood in their way.

The fire killed workers, prisoners and soldiers who tried to fight the fire. Now, on the site of the scorched city of the dead, there is a lonely cross and a memorial plate, reminiscent of the cruel revenge of nature.

Kadykchan


A photo:Moya Planeta (Kadykchan)

The infamous village of Kadykchan in the Magadan region, translated from Evenk, means "Death Valley". Gulag prisoners were brought to the settlement with a telling name during the Stalinist repressions. And in the post-war period, coal was mined here.

In September 1996, an explosion occurred at one of the local mines. The land literally exuded a threat, and the authorities closed the mines, mothballing the village. In 2012, only a wild old man with a pack of dogs lived in Kadykchan.

Economic factor

Ghost towns in Russia were also born due to economic problems. People left entire areas, leaving behind deserted settlements and vegetable gardens overgrown with weeds. The idea of ​​"catching up and overtaking America" ​​cost dearly to the inhabitants of vulnerable villages.

Iultin


A photo:ghost towns (Iultin)

The urban-type settlement with the romantic name Iultin was built in 1953 near the country's largest polymetallic deposit. With the collapse of the USSR and the closure of unprofitable enterprises, the city gradually became empty.

More than five thousand people worked at the mines and in the mining and processing plant. By the turn of the millennium, the symbol of Soviet industrialization had finally turned into a ghost town.

fin whale


A photo:Altertravel (fin whale)

The military camp is located on the coast of Bechevinskaya Bay, within transport accessibility from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. The fin whale was destined for a more heroic fate than desolation.

The strategic town, in the event of an enemy attack from Alaska, would take the main blow, allowing the evacuation of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky and the mobilization of defensive forces. On combat duty during the Cold War were diesel and nuclear submarines.


A photo:Blog.Stalkersworld (fin whale)

The fin whale was completely autonomous. The military could survive the bombing in a shelter. They could endure the food blockade for several years. The town had its own club, kindergarten, school, power plant, helipad.

With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the neat military town fell into disrepair.

gif:The Journal

man-made disasters

Russia's ghost towns have in some cases been the result of man-made disasters. The pernicious influence of a thoughtless attitude towards nature in the pursuit of industrialization has led to the devastation of many cities with ancient buildings.

Kalyazin


A photo:info-globus (Kalyazin)

The most famous flooded Russian city is the ancient Kalyazin. The first mention of this settlement in the Tver region dates back to the 12th century. In the 18th century it was given the status of a county town.

It was partially flooded during the construction of a hydroelectric power station on the Volga in 35-55 years of the last century. The Nikolo-Zhabensky Monastery and the entire historical part of the city went under water. When the Volga becomes shallow, the bell tower of St. Nicholas Cathedral looks out from under the water, representing an eerie sight.

Old Gubakha


A photo:Tuk-tuk Dom (Old Gubakha)

The town of miners Staraya Gubakha in the Perm Territory could celebrate its symbolic 300th anniversary in five years. In 1721, a rich coal deposit was discovered here. Later, the miners laid the well-known Gubakhinsky mines, around which a workers' settlement grew. In 1941 Staraya Gubakha was transformed into a city.

Over time, coal reserves began to decrease, and the inhabitants gradually left Staraya Gubakha. Today, the Russian ghost town is completely absorbed in nature.

Halmer-Yu


A photo:Rioho (Halmer-Yu)

A similar fate awaited a working town in Komi with the exotic name Khalmer-Yu. From the Nenets language it means "River of the Dead". The mining settlement of urban type was founded in 1957. In 1993, the authorities unexpectedly liquidated the unprofitable town. The protesters were forcibly taken out of Halmer-Yu.

In 2005, the President of the Russian Federation from the board of the Tu-160 strategic bomber personally ordered the bombing of the village. Today, the Russian ghost town is a bleak sight, with locals walking around the neighborhood of the "cursed city".

Mologa


A photo:Qna (Mologa)

Completes the list of ghost towns of Russia Mologa. This is an example of an irresponsible attitude towards nature and archeology. Mologa was completely flooded during the construction of the Rybinsk reservoir.

The 700-year history of Mologa ended in 1940. Hundreds of stone houses, several churches and the Afanasevsky Monastery were under water.

LIST OF ABANDONED VILLAGES IN RUSSIA - FOR THOSE WHO COULD NOT DECIDE TO LEAVE THE CITY. DECIDE NOW! Many people say that they do not know where to start, where to go, where to try if there is not much money. So the best option is to gather a few people to make it more fun (preferably at least one with experience, handy, who you can learn from), and go to an abandoned village. There you can either buy a house for a penny (30-100 tr.), or rent it, or just live for nothing, because often the owners cannot be found. Traveling to an abandoned village is the easiest first step when moving out of the city to the land. This is almost a turnkey farm, because in many places there are houses already with a story for cattle and with various outbuildings. And this immediately saves on the entire infrastructure - 3-10 million, if you build everything from scratch in an open field. And everything is already there and is here and now. It remains only to come, buy cattle and start working. From our thread on abandoned villages, we have collected all the information and sorted it for your convenience by region. Here they are - SPECIFIC PLACES WHERE YOU CAN GO ALREADY TOMORROW AND START ACTION! And we need to start now in order to have time to settle down and prepare for the sowing season by spring. FINALLY TAKE THE FIRST STEP! PLAN YOUR TRIP AND SET THE DATE TODAY! May God help you! HERE IS A LIST OF ABANDONED VILLAGES (and this is only a few dozen people left the coordinates of villages, there are hundreds of thousands of such villages in the country!): SAMARA REGION Samara region, Klyavlinsky district, with. Podgorka, I think there are 4-5 people left at home, around 400 hectares, at home there in the village council or with the secretary, they allocated it almost next to me under the OKRM program. Near water and fields. Evgeny Solychev https://vk.com/barankin_140 KOSTROMA REGION 1. Kostroma region, Kologrivsky district. Located 600 km northeast of Moscow. with its settlements stretches along the Unzha River. most of them are empty or sparsely populated. the city of Kologriv is located in the central part of the district. its population is just over three thousand people. buildings and houses are mostly wooden and mostly one or two storeyed. the city, like the entire region, has not yet been gasified. the roads, as well as throughout the Zakostroma part of the region, are, to put it mildly, very bad, and the communication is exclusively by land, that is, by road. the nearest railway station is 120 km away in the town of Manturovo. the region itself has no transit communication. the road to it is a branch from the highway to Perm, Syktyvkar or Arkhangelsk. There is a station, but there are no trains. There is an airport, but planes do not fly. there is a berth, but steamboats do not go .. This is the truth of Kologriv. all this was, but went into oblivion along with the union of Soviet republics. the reason for the migration of the local population is the lack of any jobs. Apart from logging, there are no enterprises. well, one and a half collective farms in addition. and the houses are empty. but for the last five years there have been more and more Moscow and St. Petersburg numbers on the killed roads of the region. strange, right? the village flees to the city, and the city to the village .. this is how the reclamation of villages is quietly going on by those who were once cut off from them in one generation or another ... What else is poor and rich in Kologrivsky Krai. probably the absence for many, many kilometers of all kinds of industries, factories, mines, military units, zones, dams, hydroelectric power stations, nuclear power plants, etc. ... the presence of one of the few places on the ball, near the city, where in the spring from different places on the planet, even from Japan , migratory geese-swans flock and make a multi-day stop. "Kologrivsky forest" is a state nature reserve. the forest itself is very rich in everything that a real living forest should be rich in. even the reindeer runs here to throw off their antlers, not to mention Bigfoot, who has chosen these places. The Unzha River is winding, not very deep, with rifts. and not very wide, somewhere under 100 meters. originates from the Riphean mountains. and since it flows from its source through the Kologrivsky region between forests and semi-abandoned villages, the water in the river is exclusively drinking. nothing, but the local ecology is at a high altitude. which was recently confirmed by an expedition of environmentalists visiting the village of Chermenino, saying that in the entire western part of Russia, right up to the Urals, the Kostroma region is the cleanest, and in the Kostroma region the most eco-friendly, there is the Kologrivsky district and swan geese confirm this. . only the roads are not in suit. ..by the way, the ancient, that is, the original Kologriv, is located behind the last populated village of Chermenino. in ancient times, for well-known reasons, as well as many ancient Russian cities such as Ryazan, it was moved. 30-40 km downstream, where it still stands today. Local people are basically kind and sympathetic people. although they were knocked down by the Green Serpent and the habit of walking in formation. Well, in general, if there is a pleasant craving for village life in non-civilization, health, money, a bright and sober little head, then you are here, in Kologrivsky Krai. in short everything. https://vk.com/id224648021 2. Kostroma region, Chukhlomsky, Soligalichsky district. Already on the way there (200 km from Kostroma) there are many abandoned villages right by the road. There is no need to say what is further from the road. Around the forest, many small rivers. There are also many abandoned fields of former collective farms. It is better to ask the head of a particular settlement for exact information about hectares and their cost. Alexey Plotnikov https://vk.com/ariystokrat STAVROPOL REGION Stavropol Territory, Izobilnensky district, farm Kozlov. Living 4-6 houses. I don't know how much land, but it's a lot for sure. https://vk.com/daud_1 PERM REGION 1) Perm Territory, the village of Pozhva. 2) lives according to data for 2010 - 3131 people, now even less. 3) Almost all lands are empty, except for a small number of small farms of 1 cow. 4) a lot of houses are abandoned, some more are for sale. More detailed information is available on Wikipedia "Pozhva village Perm region". Igor Demidov https://vk.com/id13765909 LENINGRAD REGION 1. Leningrad region, Volkhovsky district, Vyndinostrovsky administrative settlement, the village of Khotovo 2. 3 people have a residence permit, 10-15 live, in the summer with summer residents about 30. 3. there are empty lands in the village itself and in neighboring 4. yes abandoned houses In the village, a temple is being restored, at which an Orthodox farm is planned. Oleg Merkulov https://vk.com/merkulov_o KIROV REGION 1. Kirov region. Podosinovsky district, the villages of the empty sea, you can’t list everything. Specifically, I know where houses are sold - the village of Prichalino, the Utmanovsky village council (we ourselves have a house there, we use it as a summer cottage), the most beautiful places, near the river, forest, mushrooms, berries, fish. I also know for sure about the village of Okulovo, Yakhrensky village council, also not a bad place, the river is a little further, but mushrooms and berries are nearby. Let people come! Alexander Vorobyov https://vk.com/id133994347 2. We have a lot of abandoned villages in the Kirov region. Indescribable landscapes, clean air, no one cares, everything is overgrown. If anyone is interested I can show you. Sergei Zlobin https://vk.com/id63022118 TVER REGION 1. Tver region, village of Borovskoye, there is no population, there are already forests around the village, fields, and a river nearby. Nikita Solovyov https://vk.com/id226975029 2. Tver region Sonkovsky district. There are many non-residential villages, even more where 2-3 residential buildings remain! Sergei Pletnev https://vk.com/id156314601 3. Tver region, Torzhoksky district, Lunyakovo village. Abandoned. 1 summer resident. Around 80 hectares of land I own. Around the forest, a stream flows through the site, electricity along the border. Wholesale sale at cadastral value. They took the land for themselves, but while they brought everything to mind, they managed to settle in another area of ​​Tverskaya. More details with plans and photos on the website - http://www.agronavt.ru/zemli.htm Tatyana Lokshina https://vk.com/id108644159 UDMURT REPUBLIC Udmurt r. Glazovsky district of the village of Vasilievka. The houses are still dilapidated, no one lives the status of the village as long as there are fields in the district of 400 hectares, a clean stream, a well with soft water, springs. Mikhail Pak https://vk.com/id168526518 PSKOV REGION 1. Pskov region, Porkhov district, the villages of Rystsevo (about 30 houses), Zarechye (1 person lives, 10 houses are abandoned), Spasskoe district, Medveditsa. The last house was bought there 7 years ago for 30,000, the villages are all one after another, 360 km. from St. Petersburg to Rystsevo there was a bus service from Pskov and Porkhov. Wild boars, I am silent about mushrooms and berries - they always took away blanks in buckets, there is a lot of land, there is a small river (through all the villages). She had not been there for 15 years. Irina Kalinkina https://vk.com/id1233040 2. We are from the Pskov region ... we lived in Opochka ... but it was crowded ... we left for the Plyussky district of the village of Zayanye ... Chic places ... a maximum of 70 houses and mostly summer residents ... 200 km to St. Petersburg . We have already acquired poultry, grown a crop of very good potatoes and everything else from the ridges ... Now we are also planning to breed rabbits for ourselves ... a goat or a cow in the outline ... We bake bread ourselves ... there is a convent in the village .. .they also have their own farm ... Sergey Skomoroshkin

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