Lost Soviet Cold War city in a forest. Ghost town and a SCARY PLACE !
Lost Soviet Cold War city in a forest. This place is like a ghost town and a SCARY PLACE !
We explore this secret Cold War location where the Soviets soldiers lived..
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Wow how desolate and empty it is. I wonder what will become of it eventually? Thanks as ever for taking me with you again.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Yes in a way a sad place to see like this. Once it was tons of people there going about their things. It is planned to be demolished i read. Thanks and more to come :)
Thank you for sharing this. Greetings from Finland ❤️
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
We thank you my friend and greetings from us :)
@Jimfrod
24 күн бұрын
Torille perkele 🎉
Translation of the russian text from the basement: "Comrade! It is not polite to shit in the basement. Your arse could catch a cold!"
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
There you go and thanks for watching.
@Garden366
21 күн бұрын
Appropriate.
What an atmospheric place,reminds me of one of those apocolypee movies.Thanks so much EE and HH for revealing more of hidden history.Would have been nice if they had left a Mig29 behind!😀
@WW2HistoryHunter
21 күн бұрын
Yes that is just the feeling and we felt it was a bit scary as well :) Loved it and thanks so much my friend for being here :)
Been watching you for years! Keep it up!
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks! Will do!
Another great video a nice change in content. Thanks again from California.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
Good video, HH. Humans will destroy the building before nature. You would be looking at 100 years for nature to break down the buildings. Once water starts penetrating the concrete it will accelerate. Their heat was either hot water or steam. Stationed at a bomber base everything was heated by steam. The carrier pipes were above ground. Wintertime on the flight line averaged -30C, and we worked in it. Well done mates, another great video job. Satay safe and well.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Yes this will soon be torn down i have understood but very interesting to see this place today. Great explore and thanks so much my friend :)
A very nice change from the WWii bunkers, and what a amazing site you found with this lost city. Those room seem to be very small, so hundreds of troops, the noise must have been awlful sometimes. |Thnk you for sharing with us. Stay safe and well my friends
What a location, very interesting to see. The boiler room was really something, have never seen so many in one building. Great explore this was. Thank you and EE for taking us along. Take care and stay safe my friends.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
This place is really interesting . A bit spooky but very interesting. We saw so many small details that we have never senn before out there. Thanks Allen and more to come soon : ) Greetings from us.
Omg how have I not seen any of these I’ve got some catching up to do!!!! New subscriber here!! Looking forward to your adventures and history 🙌🏻🇬🇧
@WW2HistoryHunter
11 күн бұрын
Welcome aboard and thanks for being here :)
A very different site than the usual WW2 History Hunter explore. Interesting. Thank you EE and HH for taking us there. Stay safe. 💞
@WW2HistoryHunter
21 күн бұрын
Indeed it is and a bit scary we felt. We will share more soon Girl and keep smiling out there :)
Mother nature will take it in the end, probably depends what type of plants are natural to the area. Didn't notice and wall climbing plants, which are probably more destructive than trees. Probably still be there in a 100 years if it is left to nature. Fascinating area, thanks for showing it to us and recording it.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
I read that it is planned to be demolished in the future just dont know when that is going to start. Interesting place indeed and loved to share that with you my friend :)
These buildings were such a waste. When the soldiers left , why didn't they keep them up an let low income or homeless people live in them. If they did that they would still be in good shape an maybe have turned into a nice little town.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
So true and thanks for watching.
@donttread5916
24 күн бұрын
/// they dnt have low income, homeless like America 🤷😔.
Such a cool place thanks for sharing. Thank you and EE for your hard work!! Can't wait to see more
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching!
This was a great explre. It was indeed a lost city. The Russians style was more utilitarian than the Germans. A different kind of history tour. Take care and stay safe. 💖💯
@WW2HistoryHunter
21 күн бұрын
Yes it is really a lost city ad will de demolished in the future. Thanks and keep smiling Julie :)
Well done mate
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks for that :)
Just be careful guys some of the old buildings especially machine rooms would contain asbestos lagging.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Will do and thanks for being here :)
Probably officer quarters. Be carful of the insulation as it might be asbestoes.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching.
All of this is history I hope some of it will be saved as such.
@WW2HistoryHunter
18 күн бұрын
Most likely in a few years it is all demolished. Thanks.
Thanks!
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Very kind of you my friend and we appreciate that. Thank you from us and greetings from us :)
Thank you for all the great content you guys put on here. I love the history you're sharing! I'm sorry that I can't contribute economically at the moment, but I'm hoping to be able to chip in a few bucks when possible. 😊 Take care out there! Cheers from Sweden!
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
No worries my friend and we thank you for being here with us :) Greetings and keep smiling :)
Concrete structures can last for centuries .1000 years or more !
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Could be yes. Thank you for being here :)
Very interesting. The Soviets were not into making their living quarters decorative, solely utilitarian. Nice explore, HH and EE!❤
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
So true Cynthia , they made them rough and practical it seems. Loved to share that with you and thanks for your great support and smile :)
This reminds me so much of the abandoned city of Pripyat next to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Same style of apartments, and in the same kind of decay. It would make a great place to camp out for a week or so, then you would have time for a really good explore. A very interesting video HH and EE.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
yes looks the same actually. Great place to explore. Thanks.
great location would loved to have seen a photo of what it looked like back in the day 👍
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
Hi EE & HH. It did look like the Germans maybe started some of the construction. Didn't realize if you use water for heating, you didn't need insulation. I wonder what they are going to do with those buildings? I guess just tear them down like you said . I kinda like the bunkers better, but a nice change. Thanks 😊 HH & EE. Keep smiling. ❤❤
@WW2HistoryHunter
21 күн бұрын
yes Luftwaffe started that and the Soviet built more and was kicked out in the end :) IT is to be demolished we have learned. Thanks so much for your fantastic support and we appreciate you :)
Good afternoon from Syracuse NY United States of America my friends
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Hello Earl and thanks for being herre with us. Hope you have a great day :)
@earlshaner4441
24 күн бұрын
My pleasure my friends and outstanding videos
It would be most enjoyable if you'd get several high-powered flashlights with wide-angle beams to use inside buildings and bunkers. The narrow-beam lamps you use make viewing your videos distinctly less enjoyable than ones recorded by other people with wide-beam lamps. Your content is excellent.
@WW2HistoryHunter
9 күн бұрын
Thanks for tip and for watching.
Nice cold war video guys ! Did you get any footage from the bomb bunkers ?
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
We have more to share from here later Dave :) Thanks so much.
Very cool place, kinda like Pripyat, same buildings, same forests taking back the land. Could find some nice items i expect if you had a lot of time to metal detect. taks care guys : ))))
@neilfoster814
23 күн бұрын
I also had the exact same feeling. Definitely like Pripyat!
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Thanks my friend and what a great place it is. Greetings from us.
Hello hello hello. Thanks for taking the time to show us something from the USSR time in Germany. Sad they will destroy all those buildings, but maybe for the best. Too bad renovations couldn't be done, but that would cost more money most likely. Very quiet there indeed; nice. Take care...until the next.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Yes interesting place that is and we loved to see that. This place will be demolished i read , just a matter of time. Thanks Colleen :)
So great seeing these old Soviet bases especially when they've been expanded from WWII German bases. Glad you took us on a tour of the site through the buildings and the basements. Would be fun if we could find pictures of the base when it was active to compare how it looks now. It will be a shame if they do tear it down in the next few years.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
I agree , pretty interesting to see how they built them and the features there. It will be demolished i read. Thanks and more to come :)
Interesting tour. Seems to have been quickly and cheaply built and not meant to last for too long. Thanks for the education in Russian military architecture. Loved the writing, EE! Well done!
@WW2HistoryHunter
22 күн бұрын
Appreciated Stephanie and greetings from us :)
A fascinating look back into "recent" history. The difference in the apartment blocks is probably, as you say, officers/pilots, get the better ones, possibly even married quarters, and the bigger blocks are for the average soldier/airman to live in. It will take a while before Nature full reclaims that area. The fittings, and things, will rot or rust away, but the concrete will last a long time. Just look at some of the WW1 bunkers we've seen. It is a shame that they were not taken over and used as soon as the Soviets left, but it would cost way too much today, to fix all those apartments back up. Thank you guys for sharing this fascinating location with us. Cheers to you both!
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Yes there was most likely a system giving more and better flats to officers..Very special place to see and glad we could share it with you my friend :)
Hi there just like to say what great work you do amazing especially the German bunkers well done
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Thanks for that my friend :)
This is amazing. Ot kind of remind me of the school barracks at Fort Lee Virginia, while i was at military school in 1986 , .The school buildings were old but still used by instructors/ teachers. I took a few photos of those and other old buildings on post, with 35 mm camera. I still have, in storage. Awesome, thanks 👍.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing and for watching.
Those could of been remolded and turned into apartments with the history. Seems they waited too long for the transformation. Now it would cost to much.
@WW2HistoryHunter
21 күн бұрын
yes it is gone and will be demolished. Thanks.
50,000 people used to live here, now it's a ghost town... Call of Duty
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching.
They probably had better living standards than others from that time frame in the Eastern German zone.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Could be and thanks for watching.
Hi HH & EE, The Cold War was indeed a time of threats. In times of war and also in these accommodations, energy consumption is not really taken into account.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Yes so true and we loved to share that. Thanks and greetings from us Oma :)
You should do some metal detection here😊
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Well could have been interesting yes. Thanks.
Hi HH & EE 👋🏻 It’s a shame that nowadays there are homeless people & refugees from wars with no where to live yet these (although now rotting away) buildings are in existence 😢 Oh HH, I’ve heard from another KZreadr that KZread takes 40 or 45% of people’s “Thanks” donations! You might want to look into that? I think buy me a coffee thing is better? Take care guys, see you soon 👍🏻👍🏻✌🏻 🇬🇧🤝🏻🇳🇴
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Interesting place. Your friend is wrong :) Thanks and keep smiling.
A couple hundred years !
@WW2HistoryHunter
22 күн бұрын
ok and thanks for watching.
Cool but depressing !!!
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Interesting place. Thanks.
Hi guys another amazing video and even more amazing how come none of these abandonned places never get filled with homeless people obviously that there must be no homeless in this area.
@WW2HistoryHunter
21 күн бұрын
We loved it and thanks so much :)
reminds me of that old call of duty map
@WW2HistoryHunter
22 күн бұрын
In a way yes. Thanks for watching.
I have also been here i drove around the place.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching.
This area would be a Dream to metaldetect 🤔
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Great explore and we loved it. Thanks.
I often wonder why locations like this were not repurposed for citizens in the area to live in. I guess the technology the Russians had wasn’t to where the country it was in could utilize it. Even with the heating system that was in the buildings, it still had to be cold. You would probably have to sit next to the radiator to stay warm on really cold days. Every Russian installation you show us, the construction is never near to what the Germans did. Interesting to see how the Russians lived back in those days.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
That could be it and we have seen many such locations looking like this. Interesting place to see. Thanks Anthony :)
I think it would have taken more than a few weeks to construct one of those buildings
@WW2HistoryHunter
20 күн бұрын
ok and appreciate you watching.
Cold war was crazy.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
It sure was and thanks.
What is amazing is the buildings are concrete. Even the inside partitions. There are not many that can form concrete stairs today.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Interesting place that is and thanks for watching.
@michaeltempsch5282
23 күн бұрын
Unlikely to have been formed in situ, more likely to have been pre-cast, and put in place as the parts/modules were assembled.
@Lee-qp6gf
23 күн бұрын
@@michaeltempsch5282 Ya, some of the interior was precast.
Greetings from the united states I hope all is well with your history hunting family
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thank you for that and greetings from us :)
These buildings where pretty high Standard for the Times, they had central heating, and a Balcony. Thats stuff many people in the GDR dreamed about. I think the Commie Blocks where build by the germans for the Red army guys.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@MysterienKanal
24 күн бұрын
@@WW2HistoryHunter Love your work! You are one of my inspirations why i started my own channel about ww2 and strange stuff! 👍👌
❤😎✌️👍
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Happy that you are here with us and thanks Robert :)
Hopefully you guys took into consideration the possibility of asbestos, especially for Eagle Eyes.
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
We did and thanks for watching.
There are tons of soviet buildings from the just shells. It's nice to see how the buildings were heated by water so cool. Thank you, Eagle Eye's and history hunter.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
yes lots of them there. Thanks William from us :)
Wah
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thanks
At 15:55 the Russian writing, you can use Google Lens to translate, BTW it's not that nice. Good explore, thanks.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching.
If you found the city, is it really lost? It should be called THE FOUND CITY! 😁 The trees are Mother Nature Taking over! Here in America copper wire fetches a good sell price if you have so many feet of wire!
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
It is totally lost out there :) thanks.
👋😃👍
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Thank you my friend :)
hi
@WW2HistoryHunter
21 күн бұрын
Great to see you here :)
location?
@WW2HistoryHunter
24 күн бұрын
Locations are never given. Thanks for watching.
500 years near perfect mounds. Fast forward they will be examined by .oligist and they will be called ceremonial burials, religious, aligned to the solstice, and Orion nebula comet. Tribute Stalin
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching.
Sorry any thing to do with the Soviet union thats falling apart is good news to myself, the Soviet union and Russia still has alot to answer for.
@WW2HistoryHunter
23 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching.