Pripyat
Pripyat (Ukrainian: При́п'ять, Pryp”iat’) is an abandoned city in northern Ukraine. It lies in Kyiv Oblast, near the border with Belarus. It was home to Chernobyl nuclear power plant workers. The city was abandoned in 1986 after the Chernobyl accident, the worst nuclear reactor accident in history. Before being abandoned, about 48,000 people lived in the city. The city was founded in the 1970s, when the nuclear power plant opened. The site today is practically a museum showing the late Soviet era. With entirely abandoned buildings, including abandoned apartment buildings (four of which were yet to be used), swimming pools and hospitals, everything inside remains, from records to papers to children's toys and clothing. Pripyat and the surrounding area will not be safe for people to live there for several centuries. Scientists think that the most dangerous radioactive elements will take up to nine hundred years to decay sufficiently to render the area safe.
The city is entirely accessible and is relatively safe on the road, although it is unsafe to go around the city without a radiation dosimeter that measures exposure. The doors of all the buildings are open to reduce the risk to visitors, although many have accumulated too much radioactive material to be safe to visit.
Pripyat Media
- Pripyat panorama 2009-001.jpg
Panoramic view of Pripyat in May 2009
- Chernobylpowerplantradioactivity.jpg
View of the Chernobyl power plant including 2003 radioactive level of 0.763 milliroentgens per hour
- Pripyat01.jpg
Pripyat amusement park, as seen from the City Center Gymnasium
- Aerial view of Pripyat.jpg
Aerial view of Pripyat
- October 1996-Swimming Pool.jpg
The Azure Swimming Pool was still in use by liquidators in 1996, a decade after the Chernobyl incident.
- Swimming Pool Hall 4 Pripyat.jpg
In 2009, over two decades after the Chernobyl incident, the Azure Swimming Pool shows decay after years of disuse.
- Totalexternaldoseratecher.png
The external relative gamma dose for a person in the open near the Chernobyl disaster site. The intermediate lived fission products like Cs-137 contribute nearly all of the gamma dose now after a number of decades have passed, see opposite.
Pripyat panorama
Related pages
Other websites
| File:Commons-logo.svg | Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 62: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).. |
- Site about Pripyat created by its former residents. Contains photos from the deserted town of Pripyat and much other useful information Archived 2005-09-23 at the Wayback Machine
- Pripyat Ghost Town (1970-1986): a tale by Elena Filatova with photos Archived 2005-12-13 at the Wayback Machine
- Greenpeace pictures with no text Archived 2006-02-06 at the Wayback Machine
- Pripyat - Ghost Town II (www.opuszczone.com)