Stalin’s Lost Railway

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 1

We’ve had recently an abandoned railway in Abkhazia, abandoned as a result of USSR collapse when new “independent” republics couldn’t maintain the complicated and high-cost USSR legacy objects. But this one was abandoned long before the USSR collapse, it was doomed to be abandoned from the beginning. It was built by a personal Stalin’s order in the middle of nowhere - deep inside Northern Siberia between Salekhard city and Igarka town. It was not connected with any other Russian Federal Railway System and the purpose of it still is not very clear, so as a senseless toy it way abandoned pretty soon and now rusts accessible only with a helicopter.





Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 2

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 3

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 4

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 5

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 6

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 7

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 8

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 9

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 10

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 11

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 12

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 13

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 14

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 15

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 16

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 17

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 18

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 19

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 20

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 21

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 22

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 23

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 24

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 25

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 26

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 27

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 28

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 29

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 30

Igarka Salehard abandoned railway in Russia 31

via “Lost Biker Ru”

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    3:56 am


    56 Responses to “Stalin’s Lost Railway”

    1. caposkaw says:

      a job for political prisoners.
      absolutely useless and rather cruel.

    2. Justin says:

      I would love to visit this place. Were is the nearest city/town? How much would the helicopter trip cost? I really would like to know. I absolutely love these sorts of places!

      • adios says:

        Solovki more better and more big.

      • Zsommand says:

        Let me know when you are leaving :) I dont know why they spend money in US for film sets they should just go to Russia.

      • hardscarf says:

        You can’t go there. On january 1st 2007 the FSB has declared the railroad and the whole region north of it as part of the border zone (including Salekhard), which means the same regulations as for Norilsk, and other closed city’s and border regions: special visa/documents required. Part of it is in re-use by the oil- and gasindustry the way. Also there is the mega project Ural Industrial - Arctic Ural which will also increase new infrastructure projects to it and repair some (the railroad between Pangody and Novy Urengoi is really bad).

        The nuber of prisoners which were used were quite a lot higher then on the Solovetsky Islands, but the regime was less worse as the killing fields of the 1930s had already passed (however the muskitos were really bad and in winter temperatures could drop to -60 C).

    3. adios says:

      ya videl odin sayt s nehuyovimi foto Solovkov

    4. madineg says:

      but a cold beauty now….without a dictating leader no culture in the world would build such impressive constructions themselves….the vision of one built by thousands

      let’s say thanks for not being involved ;-)

      • zafarad says:

        that`s why i love dictatorship.no extra barriers of majority acceptance,no need to convince all assembly,no problem of funding,most of all no tension of shortage of `trained labours`.in late 40`s and early `50`s,mainly German(POW`S)are the main source of building massive Siberian infrastructure projects.when the project starts they are in millions,but at the end of the project they left in thousands! ! ! ! !.despite Stalin`s some cruel actions,i personally credit him,to build new Russsia,out of rubble and ashes.finally sender ,lost biker claimed,this rail system not connected to any main rail system.but these heavy engines,building material coming from the sky?

        • Boris says:

          >that`s why i love dictatorship.no extra barriers of majority acceptance,no need to convince all assembly,no problem of funding,most of all no tension of shortage of `trained labours

          It might have been an easier job for the government, but what if you were one of those laborers? Do you have an idea of what Stalin did? Were you, by any chance, involved with the Soviet government?

    5. Dimk says:

      It was not that senseless because this Transpolar Railway should lead to Norilsk nickel.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salekhard-Igarka_Railway

    6. caposkaw says:

      dear justin , AUSCHWITZ is more near to you…

    7. Vodka says:

      anti spam word: siberia

    8. illlich says:

      I dont understand– what is the first picture, of all the houses? Stalin built the railway, I understand, but WHAT’s with the houses? Did they build a little town too? More pictures of the houses please.

      • Alan says:

        I really want to know that too, it looks more interesting than the railway…

        • hardscarf says:

          That is probably Yermakovo on the left bank of the Yenissey (on the other side is Igarka some kilometers further north). This used to be the ‘building capital’ of project 503 (the east part of the railway). At the top period there lived some 30,000 people (mostly prisoners). Now it is a wasteland, as they conducted an underground nuke explosion (Kraton-2) in 1978, so they moved all remaining population (most had already left when Stalin died in 1953 and the whole project was cancelled) to Igarka. There was a fuss between the people who want to keep the locs, which were not yet used for scrap by the locals, at their storage rooms there, but some business men took them secretly away by helicopter. Don’t know where they are now. The place is not so radioactive anymore, but still few people care to go there. http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ермаково has some links on Russian

      • adios says:

        its called barak,if more baraki.for live for prisoners.

        or no?im right?

    9. adios says:

      заключённые охотно шли на 501-ую так как им обещали урезать сроки.обещание сдержали.

    10. Largecanine says:

      I really like EnglishRussia. You have the coolest photos.

    11. David Webb says:

      As far as can be discerned, this rail system was to be a freight line between two military bases. Stalin’s government did not have the funds to build either base, so the rail line was abandoned.

      Just another helpful tidbit from the All-Seeing Pie-In-The-Sky.

    12. Mike says:

      I love the vegetation :)

    13. [...] abandoned railroad in Abkhazia, Northern Siberia was built on Stalin’s orders in the middle of nowhere. Its original [...]

    14. Autoguy says:

      Thank you for the photos and incredible history of this! Using Google Earth, I seem to have found artifacts of this railroad.

      A remote work camp outpost:
      Lat 65.6972°
      Lon 71.7661°

      A remote bridge:
      Lat 65.6088°
      Lon 71.9813°

      Others have added photos to these locations. It appears as though the railroad line is used as a road for trucks as it goes near Nadym. If you have the coordinates of the photos above, please email them to me! Thank you once more.

      • John says:

        Hey Thanks Autoguy! I found it on Google earth. I can’t believe you can still see ruts in the ground and a road that runs beside the railroad track. Fascinating!

    15. [...] the badger next door. > ><http://englishrussia.com/?p=1808> I went off to this one: http://englishrussia.com/?p=1305 Stalin’s train set… want! http://englishrussia.com/?p=1766 — Austin Shackles. [...]

    16. [...] Abandoned remains - englishrussia.com [...]

    17. ukrainian says:

      Looks like the original Stalker movie.

    18. Corran says:

      Reminds me HC`s “Life After Us”, especially trees growing on railway

    19. [...] projects που εγκαταλείφθησαν στη λήθη. Το ένα είναι ένας σιδηρόδρομος ανάμεσα σε δυο πόλεις της βόρειας Σι… -που δεν συνδεόταν με τίποτα άλλο- και το άλλο ένα [...]

    20. What a great amount of waste
      What are those houses in the first couple of photos ?

    21. xaniel says:

      Looks like it was abandoned way before USSR had collapsed. The equipment of that kind of hardly used by 1990 and the labels on jar of pickes and vodka bottle speak of pre-1980s.

    22. [...] second photo is from a series taken at an abandoned railway in Siberia.  I especially love shots that let you have a glimpse into the lives of the people who worked at [...]

    23. Paul says:

      Wow. Those are the biggest wooden matches I’ve ever seen. (4th picture down).

      Also, was that village in the first picture made up of railway cars?

    24. [...] at these photos and reading about Stalin’s Lost Railway is pretty fascinating.  How many projects were put into motion by those in power that have been [...]

    25. Kevin says:

      Amazing pictures. I’ve read a great deal about this project but never seen pictures. My understanding is that thousands died working on this boondoggle. Would be a really interesting place to explore. Thanks for posting!

    26. You should have indicated there were more pictures below. The placement of the “beach disaster” video made me think you’d changed topics.

    27. stephen says:

      The Lost Railway

      These photos are invaluable to researchers such as me. I am currently completing considerable research for my 2nd book, You Have Two Hours to Pack. It is a true story about the deportation of one family to the Gulag; about the triumphs and tragedies of exiles. The Lost Railway is symptomatic of the misguided policies of Josef Stalin. True, he may have industrialized Siberia to a degree, but at what cost? To whom?

    28. Ummm, I don’t think it was a “boondoggle” or one of Stalin’s “misguided policies”. I’m pretty sure these where the gulags for political prisoners and those unwilling to accept communism. That’s why there was only one way in and even today, without the railway there is pretty much no way in. Sans helicopter that is. The fact that it is an area described above in this article one who’s use remains unclear is absolutely silly. This is where the reds sent Russians to die.

    29. name says:

      It may be as well a forced work camp site for post WWII deported. Soviets deported civilians of german origin to work camps in Siberia. Also war prisoners war deported until Stalin died along with political prisoners as well.

      It would be interesting to find stories about this places from survivors, probably now dead or nor surfing the net.

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