city depopulated of inhabitants and that often stays practically intact

A ghost town is a place where physical evidence remains to mark the site of a once-active human settlement which has been abandoned, leaving few or no inhabitants.

Understand

edit
Old town of Craco, Italy
Map
Map of Ghost towns

There is no commonly accepted definition of a ghost town. It is usually implied to have enough remaining or partially remaining buildings to look like a town. Some ghost towns might have a handful of permanent inhabitants; hospitality staff, researchers, or inhabitants who never left.

A few ghost towns are part of exclusion zones due to man-made or natural disasters. More commonly, ghost towns quietly appear when the reason for the town's creation no longer exists. A mining town is abandoned once too little ore remains to be profitable, a railway town is abandoned once the train no longer stops, a manufacturing town is abandoned when its last factory closes. Occasionally a village can avoid becoming a ghost town by finding a new vocation to replace a dying industry, but this becomes substantially more difficult if the town site is far off the beaten path.

While some ghost towns have been partially restored and commercialised as tourist traps, many more are in remote or awkward locations where the abandoned buildings are left to be slowly reclaimed by the elements. While legal consequences for trespassing are improbable in many of these locations, the leave-no-trace principle remains vital so that subsequent travellers may view these sites without key pieces being damaged, removed or buried in rubbish. Regardless of location, some ghost towns (or older parts of them) are archaeological sites.

Once no physical evidence remains, a settlement is typically removed from lists of ghost towns. Examples would include towns entirely flooded by hydroelectric development or wilfully demolished, if no traces remain of the former village.

Some ghost towns have been used as motion picture sets, and become destinations of fiction tourism, in particular for horror fiction.

Natural disasters

edit
Plymouth, capital of Montserrat
  • 1 Craco (Italy). Abandoned in 1963 due to landslides and has since then been used as a cinematic filming location. Craco (Q52285) on Wikidata Craco on Wikipedia
  • 2 Dhanushkodi (near Rameswaram, India). The town was completely destroyed by a 1964 cyclone, and was never inhabited again. The ruins of its submerged part were briefly exposed when the sea receded before the tsunami waves struck during the 2004 earthquake. Dhanushkodi (Q1207562) on Wikidata Dhanushkodi on Wikipedia
  • 3 Pompeii (Italy). Destroyed by the eruption of the Vesuvius in AD 79, now an archaeological site. Pompeii (Q43332) on Wikidata Pompeii on Wikipedia
  • 4 Herculaneum (Italy). Destroyed by the Vesuvius, with buildings better preserved than in Pompeii. Herculaneum (Q178813) on Wikidata Herculaneum on Wikipedia
  • 5 Plymouth (Montserrat). nominally capital of Montserrat but inaccessible and buried under volcanic ash since 1996. Plymouth (Q30990) on Wikidata Plymouth, Montserrat on Wikipedia
  • 6 Armero (Colombia). Nevado del Ruiz, a stratovolcano in Central Colombia, erupted on November 13, 1985, burying nearby towns under lahar walls up to 100 feet thick. At the time, 29,000 people lived in the town of Armero. Over 20,000 were buried alive that night. The world watched as one young resident, 13-year old Omayra Sánchez, talked to the media as she slowly died, trapped in the muds as government and rescue organizations failed to get rescue equipment to the area to save her. Today, the upper floors of the town are all that remains of the town. Armero (Q584880) on Wikidata Armero on Wikipedia
    Spires from the Church of San Juan Parangaricutiro, surrounded by field of volcanic rock
  • 7 San Juan Parangaricutiro (near Nuevo Parangaricutiro, 18 km west of Uruapan, Mexico). in 1943, Parícutin, a new volcano sprang up in the middle of a cornfield in Michoacan. The volcano continued to erupt for 9 years, forming a 424 meter cone and covering an area of 233 square kilometers in ash and volcanic rock. The volcano then went dormant in 1952. Two towns were covered in the lava flow (San Juan Parangaricutiro and Parícutin), but the church spires from San Juan Parangaricutiro protrude well above the layer of volcanic rock that hides the rest of the town. San Juan Parangaricutiro (Q5939657) on Wikidata
  • 8 Brigham City (near Winslow (Arizona) USA). An 1876 Mormon town abandoned in 1881 due to flash flooding; 37 buildings have been partially restored. Brigham City (Q482976) on Wikidata Brigham City, Utah on Wikipedia
  • 9 Saint-Jean-Vianney (Shipshaw (Québec)). Built on unstable Leda clay, was abandoned after a May 4, 1971 landslide swallowed 38 homes, killing 31. Its remaining homes were physically relocated to Arvida, leaving little at the site except a crater, a stone monument and some damaged road. In 1989-91, tiny Lemieux (Ontario) abandoned its Leda clay town site to avoid a similar fate, leaving behind just a marker and a local graveyard. Saint-Jean-Vianney (Q3462515) on Wikidata Saint-Jean-Vianney on Wikipedia
  • The original town of Poggioreale (nowadays known as Poggioreale Vecchia, Old Poggioreale) in the Trapani province in western Sicily was largely destroyed in the 1968 Belice earthquake. After the quake, a new Poggioreale was built at a location supposedly safer from future earthquakes about 4 km to the south, leaving the old one as a ghost town. Similarly, many other towns in the Belice Valley including Gibellina, Vita, Santa Margherita di Belice and Salaparuta were rebuilt at locations some distance away from the original towns.
  • Qushan, the former county seat of Beichuan County in China's Sichuan Province was abandoned following the 2008 Sichuan earthquake. The ruins have been preserved as a memorial park and a museum has been set up nearby.
  • 10 Schokland (Netherlands). The island village had to be evacuated in 1859, as more and more of the island's clay was eaten up by the stormy waters of the Zuiderzee. After a dike was completed to close off the connection of the Zuiderzee with the open sea, the water around Schokland was drained off in 1942 and it was made a part of the mainland. However, the settlement was never resumed, and the well-preserved ghost village is now a museum. Schokland (Q69307) on Wikidata Schokland on Wikipedia
Villa Epecuén waterfront before the 1985 flood
  • 11 Villa Epecuén (Buenos Aires (province), Argentina). Villa Epucuen was a growing tourist town, popular for weekend trips and vacations from Buenos Aires with scheduled trains from the capital. The town's fortunes crashed on November 6, 1985, when unusual weather broke a dam and the dike protecting the lakeside town, flooding every building in town. Villa Epecuén (Q2525050) on Wikidata Villa Epecuén on Wikipedia

Man-made disaster

edit
Abandoned houses of Kayaköy, after a population exchange due to a treaty

Climate change

edit
  • 12 Chacaltaya (El Alto, Bolivia). Once the world's highest ski area, the snow disappeared due to climate change and the ski resort is now abandoned. As of 2017, two caretakers remain. Chacaltaya (Q774941) on Wikidata Chacaltaya on Wikipedia
  • 13 Saint Martin of the Tigers (Tômbua, Angola). Abandoned in the 1970s after sea level rise cut off its water supply. São Martinho dos Tigres (Q77582148) on Wikidata Saint Martin of the Tigers on Wikipedia

Environmental

edit
  • 14 Centralia (Pennsylvania, USA). Demolished due to an underground mine fire, which was ignited in 1962 and has been burning ever since. As of 2020, five residents and many empty streets remain. Centralia (Q492386) on Wikidata Centralia, Pennsylvania on Wikipedia
  • 15 Picher (Oklahoma, USA). Lead-mining towns Picher, Treece and Cardin were already in the process of being abandoned due to lead contamination and mine shafts undermining the town site when an EF4 tornado swept in 2008, leaving a mile-wide swath of devastation which was never repaired. Many or most buildings have now been demolished; the last operating business, Gary Linderman's Old Miner's Pharmacy, closed in 2015. Picher (Q2844779) on Wikidata Picher, Oklahoma on Wikipedia
  • 16 Times Beach (near St. Louis, Missouri, USA). Abandoned and demolished due to dioxin contamination and flooding, now Route 66 State Park. One building remains as the park's visitor center, but is cut off from the rest of the park as the Route 66 highway bridge has deteriorated beyond use. Times Beach (Q2434664) on Wikidata Times Beach, Missouri on Wikipedia
  • 17 Wittenoom (Pilbara, Western Australia). Former asbestos mining town, contaminated with crocidolite asbestos dust and abandoned decades after the mine closed. Wittenoom (Q3569521) on Wikidata Wittenoom, Western Australia on Wikipedia

Nuclear

edit
Pripyat in the Chernobyl exclusion zone
  • 18 Namie (浪江町), Futaba (双葉町) and Ōkuma (大熊町) (towns in Fukushima prefecture, Japan). In exclusion zone due to tsunami-damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors. Local buildings damaged by the 2011 earthquake were never repaired. Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster (Q171178) on Wikidata Fukushima nuclear accident on Wikipedia
  • 19 Pripyat (Chornobyl Oblast, Ukraine). Abandoned due to April 26, 1986 nuclear reactor fire and radioactive contamination, five years before the fall of the Soviet Union. Visits were by guided tour only; even these appear to have stopped due to the 2022 Russian invasion. Unsurprisingly there are very strict rules concerning radiation hygiene, which the invaders neglected at their peril. Chernobyl disaster (Q486) on Wikidata Chernobyl disaster on Wikipedia

War and forced relocation

edit
A church in Ani, near Turkey-Armenia border, abandoned as result of an invasion
Inside Nicosia airport's main terminal building
  • 20 Ani (near Turkey-Armenia border). Was part of Armenia until an Ottoman Turkish invasion (sometime after the 1917 Russian Revolution) drove out the local Armenian population. Now uninhabited, but popular among travellers to Kars. Ani (Q546010) on Wikidata Ani on Wikipedia
  • 21 Kayaköy (near Fethiye in Lycia, Turkey). Under the Treaty of Lausanne, a group of Muslim farmers was forced to relocate to this mountain village from Greek Macedonia. For want of flat land for agriculture, many left; due to a 1957 earthquake and decades of neglect, this place is now partially abandoned. Kayaköy (Q1168408) on Wikidata Kayaköy on Wikipedia
  • 22 Oradour-sur-Glane (near Limoges, France). An entire village massacred and burned by the Gestapo during World War II; the ruins of the town have been left undisturbed and a museum constructed nearby. massacre of Oradour-sur-Glane (Q836897) on Wikidata Oradour-sur-Glane massacre on Wikipedia
  • 23 Nineveh (opposite Mosul, Iraq on Tigris River). Extant since Biblical times; the capital of a Neo-Assyrian Empire which began to unravel due to civil war after the 627 BC death of king Ashurbanipal. Sacked by the Babylonians, Chaldeans, Medes, Persians, Scythians and Cimmerians in 612 BC and razed to the ground. An archaeological site since 1842 and occasional target of reconstruction attempts, it has apparently been destroyed by the so-called "Islamic State," though the full extent of the damage is hard to verify. Nineveh (Q5680) on Wikidata Nineveh on Wikipedia
  • 24 Varosha (near Famagusta, Cyprus). The population of this now-abandoned seaside resort, which served as a playground for the international jet set before its abandonment, was forced out during the August 1974 Turkish occupation of Northern Cyprus. Turkish military stubbornly kept everyone at bay until October 2020, when a single street through the town leading to a beach was opened to the public. The rest of the district is still cordoned off, as are most, if not all, of the buildings along that street, which is in a heavy contrast with the crumbling surroundings it runs through due to its brand new surface, sidewalks, street furniture, and bicycle lane. Varosha (Q75666) on Wikidata Varosha, Famagusta on Wikipedia
  • Little remains of 25 Billmuthausen (in southern Thuringia, East Germany (founded 1340, demolished 1978)). Destroyed by Communist authorities because of its proximity to the "Iron Curtain" border, just a village cemetery, an electrical transformer hut and the village well remain. A church was rebuilt and a memorial constructed after the end of the cold war. Many Eastern villages within 5 km (3.1 mi) of the border fared worse; all that remains of Bardowiek, northwest Mecklenburg is an electrical transformer building and some hamlets are gone with no trace at all. Billmuthausen (Q862907) on Wikidata Billmuthausen on Wikipedia
  • 26 Nicosia airport (In the UN buffer zone between Northern Cyprus and the Republic of Cyprus). Was the main airport of Cyprus until the Turkish invasion in 1974, now stranded in a no-man's-land between Nicosia, Cyprus and Turkish-occupied North Nicosia. No longer used for commercial operations, but functions as the headquarters for the UN peacekeeping force. Most buildings including the main terminal (just used for six years when the airport was closed) plus a Cyprus Airways jet on the runway are withering away. Nicosia International Airport (Q1432185) on Wikidata Nicosia International Airport on Wikipedia
  • 27 Akarmara (near Tkvarcheli in eastern Abkhazia). Was a thriving Soviet coal mining town before it was abandoned during the Georgian-Abkhazian War in the early 1990s. Due to the humid subtropical climate of the area, a lush forest is now eerily covering the remains of the town. Tkvarcheli (Q270535) on Wikidata Tkvarcheli on Wikipedia
  • 28 Bokor Hill Station (Cambodia). Founded by the French colonialists high up the mountains in the 1920s to escape the heat and humidity of Phnom Penh, the resort was first abandoned in the 1940s, during the First Indochina War. In the 1960s, it was repopulated, this time serving the Cambodian high society, only to be abandoned again in the 1970s when the Khmer Rouge took over the area. It was one of the last strongholds of the Khmer Rouge well into the early 1990s, after their brutal regime fell in most of the rest of the country. The crumbling ruins of the once fashionable resort now attract a certain number of visitors from nearby Sihanoukville. Bokor Hill Station (Q559155) on Wikidata Bokor Hill Station on Wikipedia

Economic abandonment

edit

Deserted medieval villages

edit
What remains of metropolitan Gainsthorpe
Ruin of St Martin's parish church, Wharram Percy

An abandoned village, in archaeology, is an abandoned settlement with few visible remains. Some are solely archaeological sites in others, some remnants of a town site can still be seen, but on a smaller scale than in a ghost town. The Dutch and German languages refer to a deserted medieval village as a Wüstung. In some, a drop in population due to the Black Death of 1348–49 caused the few remaining residents in a marginal location to move to a more viable settlement, in others, crop failures on marginal lands or the enclosure of formerly-common arable farmland by lords of feudal manors caused peasant farmers to relocate in search of a livelihood. Wars and general "bad times" were also often a reason for villages to become deserted. In Central Europe a lot of villages became deserted in the course of the 1618-1648 "Thirty Years War" that killed more than half the population in some areas.

  • Gainsthorpe medieval village, south of Hibaldstow in Lincolnshire, England. A clearly-marked but desolate archaeological site now in the care of English Heritage.
  • Old Wolverton, between Bletchley and Milton Keynes in the United Kingdom, slightly northwest of the modern Wolverton settlement. Deserted 1654 as common arable land was enclosed and converted to pasture by local land lords, eliminating the livelihood of feudal peasants who once farmed the land. Two village ponds and field patterns marking a deserted village are all that remain.
  • Wharram Percy, on the western edge of the chalk Wolds of North Yorkshire, is visible as a ruined parish church at the side of a small pond. The rest of the former village, demolished by a feudal lord for conversion into sheep pasture, is now merely an archaeological site.

Fisheries, islands and outports

edit
  • Garden Island, in the Thousand Islands (Ontario, Canada). The Calvin Shipyard's (1836-1914) proprietors owned the entire island, which included an incorporated village, public library and company store. The business relied on plentiful, inexpensive local timber which eventually became scarce. The island lost its ferry service in 1976; the former machine shop was destroyed by fire in the 1980s. Little remains except some private cottages, a road network and a few ruins.
  • Grand Bruit, east of Port aux Basques and Rose Blanche in Newfoundland, abandoned 2010 and now silent. Accessible only by boat and economically dependent on fisheries. Atlantic cod stocks collapsed in the 1990s, the schoolhouse closed in 2007, the coastal ferry last stopped here July 8, 2010. Petites, a similar Newfoundland outport near Rose Blanche, was abandoned in 2003 and Great Harbour Deep, on the eastern side of the Great Northern Peninsula, was abandoned in 2002. The Rock was originally colonised as a string of tiny outports, coastal fishing villages accessible by boat in an era before highways and motorcars; provincial government paid residents to abandon three hundred of these tiny villages from 1954-1975 to avoid the cost of extending services to small, isolated populations. In most, houses were loaded onto barges and moved to other outports by sea. Grand Bruit's 31 residents left houses and furnishings behind; some are used seasonally as cottages.
  • Grytviken in the British Antarctic Territory operated as a whaling station until 1966. The last events in the area were two minor battles during the Falklands War. Today it's a ghost town and a popular stop on cruises to Antarctica.
  • Kirovsky in Kamchatka was a Soviet town with catching and processing fish being its economic base. It could support as much as 4,000 inhabitants before it was abandoned in 1964 as the fish stocks got depleted due to the Japanese drift netting in the area. An iconic concrete building right on the coast, half eaten by the sea and wave action and often likened to a scene from a post-apocalyptic film, is the only remain of the town.

Gold rush towns

edit
Cook Bank building in Rhyolite, Nevada

Common in North America as colonisation pushed settlements westward in the 1800s, a gold or silver rush typically involved towns of as many as a few thousand people constructed in remote wilderness almost overnight once word was out that prospectors had spotted precious metals. Most of these mining towns disappeared as quickly as they had formed, their original purpose ended as soon as valuable minerals had been depleted.

  • Barkerville (BC), Canada — An 1861 gold rush town, once with a population as high as 5,000, was abandoned by the turn of the century.
  • Bodie (California), USA — Now part of Bodie State Historic Park, between Bridgeport (California) and Mono Lake. The "Deadwood" of the Eastern Sierra, Bodie is preserved in a state of arrested decay. A small portion of town (about 110 structures) is still standing, including one of the many gold mills. Interiors remain as they were left, visitors walk the deserted streets of a once-bustling town where shelves were left still stocked with goods.
  • Custer (Idaho), USA — A gold mining boom town (1896-1910) abandoned on resource depletion; adjacent mining town Bonanza was destroyed by fires in 1889 and 1897. Now state parkland with picnic area.
  • Goldfield, near Apache Junction (Arizona), USA — An 1892 gold mining town abandoned five years later when the gold was depleted, now rebuilt as a tourist attraction due to its proximity to Phoenix.
  • Molson, near Oroville (Washington), USA — An 1896 gold rush on the Canadian border brought 300 people; the town's founders never registered the land and were forced to relocate the settlement a half-mile away in 1909. A railroad ran from 1906 to 1935. The principal mining and farming industries began to die in the 1920s, the border station closed in 1941 and the post office was abandoned in 1967. A small collection of empty buildings and a schoolhouse museum remain today.
  • Oatman (Arizona), USA — Defunct western gold town on bypassed highway, established early 1900s and abandoned in the 1930s. Wild burros and Route 66 tourists still roam the streets.
  • Rhyolite, near Beatty (Nevada), USA — Founded as a mine town in 1905, Rhyolite quickly became the third largest city in Nevada. After a little more than a decade, the gold was depleted and the inhabitants gone. Today the Cook Bank building is Nevada's most frequently photographed ruin.
  • South Pass City, near Lander (Wyoming) USA on the Oregon Trail, is a 19th-century gold mining town abandoned in the 1950s. Now a tourist ghost town.
  • Walhalla (Gippsland, Victoria) Australia — An 1863 gold rush town, the last mine closed in 1914. Portions of the town were rebuilt after 1977 for tourism and cottages.

Abandoned mining communities

edit
Downtown Chloride, Arizona
Battleship Island off Nagasaki, Japan
  • Adamsfield, (in Derwent Valley, Tasmania), Australia – a former osmiridium mining town, founded in 1825. It used to have a population of about 1000, but much of it today now forms part of a greater conservation park, ever since the mine closed.
  • Calico (in San Bernardino County, California), USA — A silver mining town that was founded in 1881, and largely abandoned at around the turn of the 20th century after the mine depleted. Walter Knott, the founder of Knott's Berry Farm, purchased the town from its owners in 1951, and restored it to its appearance during the silver rush era, and converted it into a tourist attraction honoring the pioneers.
  • Cerro de San Pedro (in San Luis Potosi (state), Mexico - The town was site for a number of gold and silver mines, most owned indirectly by the American Smelting and Refining Company (ASARCO). In 1948, miners decided to strike and the company responded by closing the mines and blowing up the mine shafts, even though the mines still had proven mineral deposits. The town was mostly abandoned though a few residents remain.
  • Chloride (Arizona), USA — A silver mining town (1862–1944), once population 2,000, was largely abandoned once the silver chloride deposits were depleted; just 250 people remain.
  • Gagnon and Fire Lake, near Quebec Route 389, Canada – Built to serve mines which closed as iron ore prices collapsed; the villages were abandoned and largely dismantled in 1985. A couple of large silos remain. Schefferville came close to the same fate, but still has a few hundred people – many Aboriginal.
  • Gleeson, Courtland, Pearce and Cochise (Arizona), USA — A string of copper mining towns was abandoned once the ore was depleted.
  • Gunkanjima (端島 or Hashima, known also as Battleship Island) off Nagasaki, Japan — A former city (once the record holder for highest population density in the world) and mining community has been a ghost town since 1974 as a result of a Japanese coal mining crisis in the 1960s, but remains accessible by organized boat tours. Nearby Ikeshima is similar but far well less known, and not entirely a ghost town as around 100 hardy people still call it home.
  • Jussarö island south of Raseborg on the southern coast is Finland's only ghost mining town. The rugged and scenic island hosts by design a guest marina (59°49,6‘N 23°34,1‘E) on the HankoHelsinki southern route.
  • Kadykchan, Magadan Oblast, Russian Far East — A coal mining town quickly waned after its mine was closed down due to an accident and the skyrocketing costs as the government subsidies were done away with alongside communism. The final blow to the town was a hot water system failure in what is among the coldest areas on earth. Kadykchan is traversed by the Kolyma Highway, which connects it with other semi-abandoned towns deep inside the taiga.
  • Kolmanskop (near Lüderitz), Namibia — A desert town abandoned in 1956 after its diamond field ran out. Its German colonial buildings, now under knee-deep sand, are the destination of daily tours from Lüderitz.
  • Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard, Norway — A 1916 coal mining town, which housed 400 people at its peak, was shut down in 1962 after an explosion killed 21. Ny-Ålesund (78.916°N, 11.933°E) reopened in 1968 as an Arctic research base.
  • Mineral de Pozos, Guanajuato, Mexico — An original mine opened in 1596, a second in the late 1800s. Flooded mine shafts and tunnels led to the town being virtually abandoned by the mid 20th century.
  • Pyramiden — One of three Soviet-era mining towns on Svalbard; the Svalbard Treaty granted Norway sovereignty but allowed all treaty signatories to exploit natural resources. Abandoned in 1998 as too costly to operate, leaving Barentsburg (Баренцбург) as the only remaining Russian settlement on Svalbard. Reachable seasonally by ship from Longyearbyen in Norway's high Arctic.
  • San Sebastián del Oeste, Jalisco, Mexico — thrived as a gold-mining town reaching a peak population of 20,000 until the early 20th century when the mines shut down. About 600 people now live in the town.
  • Sego (near Thompson Springs, Utah) USA — A coal-mining town abandoned in the 1950s. A boarding house, company store, and some foundations and dugouts are all that remain.
  • Viivikonna, Estonia – Abandoned Soviet-era mining community near the Sillamäe town in the Ida-Viru County.
  • 29 Eagle Mountain (Riverside County, California, United States). An abandoned mining town, which has been the set for several films, including Tenet. Eagle Mountain (Q5325163) on Wikidata Eagle Mountain, California on Wikipedia

Railway and highway abandonment

edit
Las Vegas and Tonopah rail station in Rhyolite (Nevada).
  • Amboy (California), USA — created as one in a series of alphabetically-named rail towns at which steam trains once stopped to take on water. The train no longer stops.
  • Cisco, near Moab (Utah), USA — old west rail town, a saloon and water-refilling station for the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad mentioned in Johnny Cash song "Cisco Clifton's Fillin Station". The town's decline coincided with the demise of the steam locomotive.
  • Cooladdi (Queensland), Australia — pre-dated the arrival of the railway, but died after the rails were rerouted away from the town.
  • Depot Harbour (Ontario), Canada — Great Lakes cargo port serving a rail line which crossed Algonquin Provincial Park to Ottawa. The rail line fell into disuse as competing railways were consolidated and was abandoned.
  • Glenrio (New Mexico and Texas), USA — Former railway town (the tracks are now gone) and Route 66 rest stop (bypassed by a freeway, now I-40). Texola, a rail town on Route 66 just across the border from Texas to Oklahoma, is almost as dead; as of 2010, only three dozen people remained.
  • Hackberry (Arizona), USA — An 1875 mining town west of Peach Springs; the silver mine closed in 1919 amid legal infighting between its owners. Route 66 came to town in 1926; Arizona 66 from Kingman to Seligman (82 miles) was bypassed by I-40 on a more direct 69-mile route in the 1970s. Hackberry was abandoned from 1978 to 1992, Valentine and Truxton also became highway ghost towns while Peach Springs was kept marginally alive by the Hualapai nation.
  • Lyndhurst (South Australia, Australia) and Farina are just a fraction of its original size after the Ghan railway (earlier called the Great Northern Railway) did its last run via Lyndhurst in 1980. The Ghan now runs more a northwestern alignment towards Coober Pedy these days rather than a northeastern.

Abandoned military installations

edit
Mining building on Jussarö, Finland
  • Jussarö, an island near Raseborg, Finland — Former iron ore mining site used by the army for urban war simulations (1967-2005), then abandoned. A lighthouse still stands on the island.
  • Peenemünde, in northeastern Germany near the Polish border — V1 and V2 rockets were built and launched here by the Germans during WW2. The abandoned sites are today an open air museum.
  • Skrunda-1 radar base, near Kuldīga, Latvia — Soviet over-the-horizon radar installation, dismantled 1998 and abandoned. Sixty buildings included apartment blocks, a school, barracks and an officers club; effectively, a former village of 5000 people. A private Latvian company Iniciative Europa purchased the site for 170,000 Latvian lats in 2010 but, as of 2012, the property remains abandoned with a lone guard blocking the main entrance to visitors.

Industrial abandonment

edit
Fordlândia, an abandoned rubber plantation
  • 30 Fordlândia. was established as a rubber plantation for the Ford Motor Company in the middle of the Brazilian jungle in 1928. However as the management didn't know anything about tropical agriculture and the indigenous workforce was badly treated (which even led to an uprising in 1930), the project turned into a fiasco pretty quickly. Ford made a new attempt in nearby Belterra (where rubber is still produced); however, the invention of synthetic rubber made Henry Ford's grandson sell everything to the Brazilian government in 1945 for about 1% of what they had invested in the projects over the years. Today you can visit the ruins of the plantation by car or tour from Santarém (Brazil).
  • Val-Jalbert, near Roberval (Québec) - Industrial town built around a mechanical pulp and paper mill, powered by a waterfall. Obsolete once pulp for paper was manufactured using chemical (not mechanical) process, now a commercial tourism site with a small modern hydroelectric generating station.
  • Misnebalam, Yucatán (3 miles north of the Dzibilchaltún archaelogical site) once had a thriving hacienda but when it closed, the town's population drifted away, with the last two residents moving out in 2010.

Abandoned resorts

edit
  • Arlington (Missouri), opposite Jerome on Gasconade River. Originally served by the Pacific Railroad, Stony Dell Resort was a popular pre-World War 2 Route 66 rest stop in the Ozarks, with a pool fed from underground streams. Portions were destroyed when the highway was realigned and widened, the rest is ruins. The original bridge across Little Piney Creek was removed, forcing traffic to bypass the village on what is now I-44. A few miles northeast, a deteriorating ghost tourist court (John's Modern Cabins, near Vernelle's Motel in Newburg) rests abandoned since the 1970s.
  • Elkmont (Tennessee), founded in 1908 by the Little River Lumber Company as a logging town, later a resort with a hotel. When Great Smoky Mountains National Park was created, former cottage owners in Elkmont were initially permitted to lease their properties back. This ended in 1992 as the government refused to renew the leases. The former Wonderland Park Hotel structure collapsed in 2005; some other abandoned buildings survive as the Elkmont Historic District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
  • Prora in northeastern Germany was projected as a monstrous Baltic Sea resort for 20,000 travellers by the Nazis in the 1930s. Construction was almost finished when the Second World War broke out, but the resort never did open. Part of it was later used as barracks by the East German military. Today a small part of it is an official museum and another part of it has been refurbished and is used as a hotel, but most of the buildings are empty.
  • Salton Sea, a shallow expanse of water in the Californian desert accidentally created in 1905 when the Colorado River was diverted to the basin it occupies for irrigation, had a booming tourist trade in the 1950s and '60s in the towns that line its shores. However, it all came to an end in the 1980s as the lake's salinity and pollution levels increased to such an extent that there were massive fish die-offs. The former resorts that surround the lake are now semi-ghost towns; Bombay Beach in particular is (in)famous for its former beachside trailer park with abandoned structures encrusted by salt.
  • Tskaltubo was a premier Soviet spa resort in the Caucasus, featuring a gorgeous Stalinist architecture in a beautifully landscaped setting, now mostly derelict and overgrown. After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the number of visitors reduced to a trickle, so some of the buildings were converted to the use of ethnic Georgians fleeing the conflict in nearby Abkhazia, and those that weren't, simply got abandoned.
  • Yashima, Kagawa Prefecture (屋島) near Takamatsu, Shikoku, Japan. Resort with six hotels, a cable car and a few shops built during a 1980s real estate boom, now abandoned.
Roveraia

Casualties of urbanization

edit

Abandoned villages out in the countryside, left to deteriorate as their inhabitants all moved to the cities.

  • Village without People (无人村) in Kaiping, China. A tall watchtower and a couple of small neighborhoods of traditional Chinese houses, some with remnants of furniture, pottery, and clothes inside, slowly being reclaimed by the trees and vines since its last residents moved out in 1998.
  • 31 Roveraia near Pratovalle, Arezzo, Tuscany, was a partisan base during World War II. It was abandoned between the 1960s and the 1980s. Now it is in ruderal state, with vegetation beginning to take over. Two projects have been proposed for the recovery of the village:
    • in 2011 the proposal of Movimento Libero Perseo Roveraia Eco-lab, based on sustainability;
    • in 2019 there was a proposal aiming to recover the village with a mix of functions called Ecomuseum of Pratomagno.

Failed economic developments

edit
The first version of Helsinki used to be located here

Cities have been built as planned communities and never occupied:

  • 32 Burj Al Babas (near Mudurnu, Turkey). A mountain resort aimed at the Gulf market, the construction of Burj Al Babas was started in 2014. However, in 2019 the developers filed for bankruptcy, so this is a surreal setting of several hundreds of identical château-like villas — some with almost finished façades, some only in the form of a concrete shell — in the middle of nowhere. Burj al Babas (Q60842230) on Wikidata Burj Al Babas on Wikipedia
  • A China International Trust and Investment Corporation development, Kilamba New City (30km/18miles from Luanda, Angola) was designed to house a half-million people but (as of 2013) had less than a tenth that due to the lack of a middle class able to afford mortgage loans. One school remains open, serving primarily students arriving by bus from other towns.
  • Helsinki was first founded by the Swedish king in 1550 at the mouth of Vantaa river. Intended as a competitor to the Hanseatic city of Tallinn, the new city failed to attract inhabitants, and after fires and disease outbreaks, the village disappeared in a little more than a century. While Helsinki eventually started growing in the late 18th century at the southern tip of Helsinki peninsula (about 5 kilometers further southwest), a few stones marking the site of Helsinki's first church is the only thing left of the original city.

Stay safe

edit

As these sites are mostly abandoned, their condition is deteriorating rapidly. Roads are often unmaintained. Bridges and structures, if in poor condition, may not be able to bear your weight. The floorboards of abandoned buildings may be rotten and ready to break; buildings may be close to roof collapse. Sites may also be contaminated with anything from broken glass to asbestos to disease-ridden animal droppings.

If a site was abandoned due to man-made environmental disaster, it may still be heavily contaminated. Chernobyl and Fukushima are prime examples, with actively enforced exclusion zones with high levels of radioactive contamination.

See also

edit


This travel topic about Ghost towns is a usable article. It touches on all the major areas of the topic. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.