Abandoned Russian Polar Nuclear Lighthouses

Russian Northern coast is a vast territory lays for a few thousand of miles and all this coastline is inside the Polar Circle. Long polar winters mean no daylight at all, just one day changes another without any sign of the Sun rising above the horizon. There is only polar night for 100 day a year.
But across this Northern coast there was always a short way for the cargo boats to travel from Eastern part of Russia to the Western. Now this trip can be made fairly easy with the appearance of all the satellite navigation equipment like GPS and others, but during the Soviet Era they had none of this.
So, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union decided to build a chain of lighthouses to guide ships finding their way in the dark polar night across uninhabited shores of the Soviet Russian Empire. So it has been done and a series of such lighthouses has been erected. They had to be fully autonomous, because they were situated hundreds and hundreds miles aways from any populated areas. After reviewing different ideas on how to make them work for a years without service and any external power supply, Soviet engineers decided to implement atomic energy to power up those structures. So, special lightweight small atomic reactors were produced in limited series to be delivered to the Polar Circle lands and to be installed on the lighthouses. Those small reactors could work in the independent mode for years and didn’t require any human interference, so it was very handy in the situation like this. It was a kind of robot-lighthouse which counted itself the time of the year and the length of the daylight, turned on its lights when it was needed and sent radio signals to near by ships to warn them on their journey. It all looks like ran out the sci-fi book pages, but so they were.
Then, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the unattended automatic lighthouses did it job for some time, but after some time they collapsed too. Mostly as a result of the hunt for the metals like copper and other stuff which were performed by the looters. They didn’t care or maybe even didn’t know the meaning of the “Radioactive Danger” sign and ignored them, breaking in and destroying the equipment. It sounds creepy but they broke into the reactors too causing all the structures to become radioactively polluted.
Those photos are from the trip to the one of such structures, the most close to the populated areas of the Russian far east. Now, there are signs “RADIOACTIVITY” written with big white letters on the approaching paths to the structure but they don’t stop the abandoned exotics lovers.




















photos by kamatoz
| Tags: abandoned, lighthouse, nuclear abandoned, polar circle, russian abandoned, russian east, russian lighthouse, russian north |
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If they there fully-automatic, then why there is a toilet, and daily log at the pictures? O_o
yeh thats what i thought, but i guess if its the closest one to civilisation then maybe some where occupied.
i had exactly the same thought
those books look like log books for mayb a coastal watch?
or for just monitoring the power..
OMG Russians are so poor they can’t even maintain thier own coastline and lighthouses. Its such a pity. Is that why there has been a recent surge in ship wreck, sunken submarine in russian waters?
Yes, that is EXACTLY why the submarines sunk, because the lighthouses were out of order. Lighthouses are crucial for submarine navigation.
zing
rofl
Oh yeah, underwater lighthouses, I get it……
hahahaha Miss India you are an idiot
Can you just shut the fuck up Miss India - I sick of your pointless comments.
Anonymity won’t save you from Karma dropping by to kick you in the ass. Lighten up.
Agreed. People spend more time making pithy comments than thinking.
For all the haters who replied to MI, I don’t remember when submarines were prevented from using terrestrial navigation aids (visual and radio per the article). Thousands of miles of rugged coastland, polar night 1/3 of the year, no guarantee of a cloudless sky… Nope. I see no reason to pop the periscope or surface for any reason. I guess all their skippers were Sean Connery or Captain Nemo (pick the pithy comment that best suits your generation).
Norg Worren, relax, Miss India just fucked himself over on this one, had a good laugh myself. LOL, submarines sink because of out of order light houses…
I was thinking the exact same thing!
well they were fully-automatic, which doesn’t make ‘em maintenance-free. And the maintenance people aren’t robots - they need to go pee and poo, ’specially when maintenance might stretch for a week or two…
They were at the top of a lighthouse in the middle of nowhere!
I would have tried bombing the seagulls…
even in -50 degrees of celsius in heavy snowstorm?
Daily logs and toilets are expected. The lighthouses themselves were probably erected prior to the Soviet’s completion of design for self sufficiency. There would have been lighthouse keepers until the work was completed. Logs would be unnecessary after that point but until that point it’s understandable.
Side Note: Even if everything had been designed and assembled and set to use without the need for people there would still have been someone needed to oversee it initially to make sure that it was working properly. That person may have only been there for a week but he would have needed to use the bathroom in that time frame
That lens is worth more than all the scrap metal that is in or was in that lighthouse.
I was thinking the same thing. Only problem is, I suspect it’s a lot easier find a buyer for copper than lighthouse lenses.
I’m not sure if I hope the looters die of leukemia or not.
I can’t remember where I first read this, but my understanding is that the lighthouses were powered by big RTGs, not by mini-reactors. Makes sense to me since as long as you have enough Sr-90 or some other suitable isotope, it’s much easier and safer to make a simple RTG than to design an entire reactor. Plus I can’t imagine a fully automatic reactor
Correct, they were RTGs. They used Pu238 as the heat source.
They did build automated nuclear reactors, as we know in Canada because one of them, Cosmos 954, deorbited and strewed itself over granite terrain. Searching for it with radiation detectors was said to be like looking for a red nose in a sunset.
I think the lighthouse RTGs were powered by 90-Sr, not 238-Pu, because some of the wreckers got toasted, which plutonium can’t really do. Also 90-Sr is a lot easier to get.
Either way, it’s like a reactor that is always at 100 percent, even after you cut it open and spread it around. An actual fission reactor is much less dangerous.
Where is this? Does anyone know?
Maybe here.
http://www.panoramio.com/map/#lt=46.020092&ln=143.427544&z=4&k=1&a=1&tab=1
“Радиация”? I hope the photographer brought a Geiger counter with them. One wouldn’t want to die of radiation poisoning.
Not likely. More likely they’ll contract leukemia later down the road.
Congratulations to the camera man…very brave or verrrryyyy stupid…No jokes with Plutonium
jokes with Putinium ?
hehe
anyway, nice pics and lovely abandonned place !
clean up the mess and radiation, it would make for an awesome hideout for a james bond villain..especially the first photo looks like a rocket would be launched from the light house
Yes, look how “good” it worked on my old friend Litvinenko!
[...] This is quite amazing to me. Never heard of these before. The great northern coast of Russia is inside the Arctic Circle, and the shoreline is hundreds of miles from civilisation almost the whole way along. Lighthouses were required for the coast, because it’s a handy passage but it spends a hundred days of the year in near-permanent night. The problems were that they’d be miles from anywhere, and couldn’t realistically be supplied or crewed. [...]
[...] fabricar Faros nucleares. Cada uno con un pequeño reactor nuclear que genera electricidad. Problema resuelto. [...]
Second anon’s comment. I presume a fully-contained nuclear reactor would be much too expensive for this purpose. It’s much more likely they used large RTGs ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radioisotope_thermoelectric_generator ). These are the same type of power sources that power space probes such as the Voyagers. They can last for many decades. ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voyager_program#Power )
[...] and pick up a comic or two that he’s written. You will NOT be disappointed. Oh and head over HERE for the original [...]
Solar power? Yup, that would work well above the Polar Circle with more than 100 days a year without light.
Sure looks nice.. Think i’m going to do some exstensive research about those locations & pay them a visit too :p
[...] Abandoned Russian Lighthouses - a series of crumbling structures in beautiful natural surroundings. Add a healthy dollop of poverty and tragedy: After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the unattended automatic lighthouses did [the] job for some time, but after some time they collapsed too. Mostly as a result of the hunt for the metals like copper and other stuff which were performed by the looters. They didn’t care or maybe even didn’t know the meaning of the “Radioactive Danger” sign and ignored them, breaking in and destroying the equipment. [...]
[...] great pictures here at Englishrussia.com posted under [...]
Indeed, they were powered by RTGs, not mini-reactors.
Is that a nuclear light house in you pocket or are you just glading to see me?
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Very cool. Do you have higher resolution copies of these that I could have?
This story makes my penis hurt.
James Bond The world is not enough!
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I would paint it pink with a purple tip and draw a big hand on the shaft
This comment makes my penis feel teenie weenie.
You guys are right about RTG -> http://www.bellona.no/bellona.org/english_import_area/international/russia/nuke-weapons/nonproliferation/28067
[...] nuclear lighthouses English Russia Abandoned Russian Polar Nuclear Lighthouses __________________ Reduce, reuse, and recycle [...]
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This too: http://www.bellona.no/bellona.org/english_import_area/international/russia/navy/northern_fleet/incidents/37598
Somehow u russkies want to downplay your “incidents”!
“why there is a toilet, and daily log at the pictures?”
I suspect a maintenance crew is supposed to visit periodically.
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It would be very interesting if this website could post a bit more detail on these facilities, such as how long did they function before they were vandalized.
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I think it’s beautiful, in a decaying, post-apocalyptic way. Brings stories & images to my mind.
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Really really interesting to see the former soviet flag of Estonia on the pictures. The one with blue waves on the red background. Greetings from Estonia!
what a awesome piece of history..one could make a great getaway home out of one of these lighthouses
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Nuclear-class light houses. I want one.
Besides, radioactivity never harmed anybody.
At least that is what my Dear Leader says to me over the cities civil defense public announcement system.
[...] Faro nuclear abandonado en la costa rusa en English Russia. [...]
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Some Guy did want to know where this lighthouse is located -
this lighthouse is the more or lesser famous Aniva Lighthouse
Here it is located:
http://www.panoramio.com/map/#lt=46.019317&ln=143.413811&z=4&k=2
and here is a little bit background story:
http://www.sakhalin.ru/Engl/Region/lighthouses/lighthouses.htm
http://www.unc.edu/~rowlett/lighthouse/sak.htm
have a nice day folks
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Interesting but its just sad to note these are abandoned and left to be radio active.
Are there any effort to clean it up.
[...] Right now, these structures can be visited, if you don’t care about you or your future kids growing up extra members—the lighthouses are, obviously, contaminated with radiation. [English Russia] [...]
[...] Abandoned Russian Polar Nuclear Lighthouses Russian Northern coast is a vast territory lays for a few thousand of miles and all this coastline is inside the Polar Circle. Long polar winters mean no daylight at all, just one day changes another without any sign of the Sun rising above the horizon. There is only polar night for 100 day a year. But across this Northern coast there was always a short way for the cargo boats to travel from Eastern part of Russia to the Western. Now this trip can be made fairly easy with the appearance of all the satellite navigation equipment like GPS and others, but during the Soviet Era they had none of this. So, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union decided to build a chain of lighthouses to guide ships finding their way in the dark polar night across uninhabited shores of the Soviet Russian Empire. So it has been done and a series of such lighthouses has been erected. They had to be fully autonomous, because they were situated hundreds and hundreds miles aways from any populated areas. After reviewing different ideas on how to make them work for a years without service and any external power supply, Soviet engineers decided to implement atomic energy to power up those structures. So, special lightweight small atomic reactors were produced in limited series to be delivered to the Polar Circle lands and to be installed on the lighthouses. Those small reactors could work in the independent mode for years and didn’t require any human interference, so it was very handy in the situation like this. It was a kind of robot-lighthouse which counted itself the time of the year and the length of the daylight, turned on its lights when it was needed and sent radio signals to near by ships to warn them on their journey. It all looks like ran out the sci-fi book pages, but so they were. Then, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the unattended automatic lighthouses did it job for some time, but after some time they collapsed too. Mostly as a result of the hunt for the metals like copper and other stuff which were performed by the looters. They didn’t care or maybe even didn’t know the meaning of the “Radioactive Danger” sign and ignored them, breaking in and destroying the equipment. It sounds creepy but they broke into the reactors too causing all the structures to become radioactively polluted. Those photos are from the trip to the one of such structures, the most close to the populated areas of the Russian far east. Now, there are signs “RADIOACTIVITY” written with big white letters on the approaching paths to the structure but they don’t stop the abandoned exotics lovers. More pictures here. [...]
Can any off this “stuff” be used by IDIOTS to make wepons, or has anyone asked that question???????
Perhaps you are the only person to have thought of that. Quick! Right now, stop what you’re doing and get on the phone with Medvedev and alert him to what people might be doing. I’m sure he’ll be just a alarmed (!!!!!!!!!) as you are to know that IDIOTS are threatening to make weapons. I hate it that IDIOTS are always enriching low-grade radioactive bullshit and turning it into weapons grade fissile material. Damn IDIOTS.
Well, at least the world has you. You always think of everything. Thanks for you vigilance!
Hey, don’t be a douche, Wilson. Paul wasn’t saying anything about making a fission bomb. He said weapon (well “wepon” actually). To my knowledge, the strontium used for RITEGs could never be enriched to produce a fissile material, because Sr-90 doesn’t have the nuclear properties to be fissile. However, I believe he was referring to a dirty bomb. That is, he is worried somebody will take a few pounds of the radioisotope and disperse it via conventional explosive for nefarious purposes.
it scares the shit out of me thinking about hundreds of container holding stuff to make dirty bombs standing around in areas in witch no checks if everything is still where it belongs
[...] Right now, these structures can be visited, if you don’t care about you or your future kids growing up extra members—the lighthouses are, obviously, contaminated with radiation. [English Russia] [...]
Yes surely going to see the lighthouses would make ur babys be born NAKED!
[...] gaussling in CounterCurrent, Nuclear, Oddities, Science. trackback Here is an obscure topic- the Nuclear Lighthouse. Seems the Russians set up unmanned lighthouses in remote coastal locations in the north. These [...]
[...] Here are a few of the pictures… Click here for the full page. [...]
I am going to start a monthly calender with “best of” Abondoned Russian Polar Nuclear Lighthouses.
Enjoy your favorite Nuclear Lighthouse by the month! $19.95 (??Roubles).
What is more detrimental to a persons health - Nuclear Lighthouses or the “Quality Russian Dating Service” (advertised with this article)?
[...] seem to have this unique penchant for not leaving well enough alone, and when we don’t we get this sort of [...]
The RTG were made from Strontium-90 and quite deadly if exposed.
Can you imagine SMALL nuclear reactor for each lighthouse? how much was all this at soviets time?? There is a company just started to promote silimar reactors for sale and they are few tens of millins of $$$.
[...] Abandoned Russian Nuclear Lighthouses [...]
[...] les visiter, si vous n’avez rien contre les radiations, qui sont évidemment partout autour. [English Russia] Partager sur Viadeo | [...]
Interesting stuff. Anybody notice the paint pealing off of everything. That takes a while, but maybe the Soviet paint was not any good. If these light houses were so far from anywhere that maintenance would be difficult, or even impossible, then how could anyone afford to strip copper, or other materials from the property and then transport it to someplace far away that would purchase the copper? Most photographs of facilities in the old Soviet Empire looked like it was all dilapidated and run down and these pictures of the light houses looked the same. Can you without any hesitation believe anything that came out of the Soviet Union as anything but propaganda? The power for a light house is not great, particularly if no one was living there. A small reactor, properly designed, maybe one not even operating efficiently could be made to operate automatically for long periods of time, particularly if you have no concerns about potential liability should something go wrong. There would be no population center near the light houses to be concerned about and any radiation that got loose would cause little concern way out in the middle of nowhere. The Russians were not very concerned when the Chernoble reactor went belly up because of incompetent operators playing games with the reactor and the many people who died attempting to shield the stinking mess. Helicopter pilots carrying material over the reactor core to dump shielding material paid a price for their duties comes to my mind. The photographs of these light houses look like they were pretty old structures. The light house fresnel lense is an old design used prior to the event of modern lamp fixtures and parabolic mirrors. Automated lighthouses along the West Coast of the USA now frequently use a small rotating lamp fixture in place of the old very large glass lenses. Some of the comments herein are just plain silly, or maybe even stupid, particularly the sexualy oriented ones.
Good post Russ…
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I have visited one of these sites in Archangelsk region. The site was much more desroyed and looted compared with this one. As in this case radioisotope thermoelectric generators (most dangerous agregates)
were dismandled.
There were build around 1000 such lighthouses in Soviet Union. Many on them have been dismantled. It is also interesting that some of litghhouses can not be located, because of the dismanagement.
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That’s Ukraine
[...] Abandoned Russian Lighthouses [...]
[...] Abandoned Russian Polar Nuclear Lighthouses [...]
[...] σε μορφώσω και λίγο. Ιδού πως λειτουργούσαν οι φάροι των σωβιετικών. Ε? [...]
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A dirty bomb is not hard to make and any person could probably do it! Jack ass!
[...] http://englishrussia.com/ [...]
[...] Russia built a chain of NUCLEAR LIGHTHOUSES in the far north! http://englishrussia.com/?p=2198 [...]
[...] more photos at English Russia You can leave a response, or trackback from your own [...]
Not very dangerous to visit, half life only 30yrs, long past its use by date, no activity anymore.
Are there raw DIAMONDS on photo n.10 near the logbook??
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I have always been fascinated by Russian technology. Such a shame, the vandalism and damage done to these wonderful technological masterpieces. Kind of reminds me of how the casing stones were removed from the pyramids. Such wonderful things we are capable of, yet there is always some asshole that’s going to come along and fuck it up.
Great pics! They should do a tv documentary on these things, and show many of them. That would be great, before they are all destroyed, if not already.
[...] not only automated, but nuclear powered. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, people began to strip them for metal, including the radiation [...]
[...] leave a comment » Abandoned Russian Polar Nuclear Lighthouses [...]
[...] is really cool, but doesn’t sound like a great place to visit: http://englishrussia.com/?p=2198 a few seconds ago from [...]
[...] LINK (English Russia) I Love Social BookmarkingSubscribeDiggdel.icio.usStumbleUpon Tweet This Post This entry was written by Von, posted on January 22, 2009 at 10:21 pm, filed under Uncategorized and tagged atomic, Lighthouse, Nuclear, Russia. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL. « The Internet Just Ate Itself Velvet Lined Purse » [...]
[...] read about this location first on English-Russia. He has interior photos taken by an urban explorer, though none that are particularly striking. It [...]
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bullshit! how could they be nuclear? more like they had small petrol or diesel generator!
Never read topics of Brits about Russia and you will never became idiot. It’s one thing i can say. Stupid journalamers in Western Europe wants to show Russia as something like in stone age, but actually they are in there themselves. They even cannot to understand it was enough to use radionavigation to avoid collisions in darkness of polar navigation. When my grandfather was 20 years old he used to sail at there and he never heard about nuclear lighthouses.
Brits are barbaric morons who never heard about radio? I always suspected something like that… Vsem priven, tupye polupendosy!
[...] via EnglishRussia.com [...]
very interesting n creative…..liked it!!
Wow, I wonder how many other abandoned nuclear reactors there are in the world, just sitting around.
[...] probes do. or various Russian telemetry devices and unmanned light houses right here on earth… English Russia Abandoned Russian Polar Nuclear Lighthouses I dont think the little UAVs with 2-3 hour fly time would use something like this but the bigger [...]
Great posting. Thanks for useful information.