Missing from maps, a ghost town hides in the pine forests of central Ukraine, abandoned after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, but now filling with families fleeing the pro-Russian eastern separatist war.
Orbita, a town whose existence was never registered by Soviet authorities, was meant to house 20,000 workers at a nuclear power plant whose construction was abandoned after the Chernobyl disaster in April 1986.
The road through the woods that leads to the site is dilapidated, the sign marking the town’s entrance covered with rust, but two small playgrounds next to the abandoned buildings are clean and tidy.
Alina, a blonde 10-year-old with a grin and few worries on her mind, is playing next to her grandfather Vladimir Limarchenko, a man who has lived through many hard times.
Her family left their home in the former Soviet republic’s industrial heartland almost as soon as the fighting erupted two years ago, in a conflict that has since killed more than 9,300 people and forced 1.7 million from their homes.
“We did not know where to go. We just took a train to central Ukraine, where our relatives live, and by chance our fellow traveler at the station told us about Orbita,” said Limarchenko, who worked as a mechanic before retiring.
His new neighbor Vasiliy came to Orbita from the pro-Russian separatist city of Lugansk a few months ago and is now renovating a damp apartment in a five-story building that stood empty for many years.
“My home was seized by the rebels, so I have nowhere to return to. Life is very expensive everywhere, but here I took an apartment on credit for a very low price,” said the 36-year-old, who lives on a disability pension.
“It is better to live in the forest than under fire,” he added.
Eight families from various parts of the war-scarred east have relocated to Orbita, attracted by its cheap prices and calm.
It costs less than US$1,500 to buy one of the Soviet-era apartments, a pittance compared to the average US$40,000 that people pay in the capital, Kiev.
Orbita’s tale is tightly intertwined with that of Chernobyl, whose explosion spewed radiation across nearly three-quarters of Europe and left several thousand people dead or dying.
Plans for the town were initially drafted in 1970, the year ground was broken for the Chygyryn nuclear power plant, whose construction was never completed.
Authorities of then-Soviet Ukraine planned to make Orbita the home of engineers from the plant — in what was intended to be the equivalent of Pripyat, a city of 48,000 built 3km from Chernobyl.
In the 1980s, two nine-story and two five-story apartment buildings, a department store and all the necessary infrastructure were built.
However, the disaster at Chernobyl, the world’s worst nuclear accident, meant plans to complete the Chygyryn plant were quickly abandoned, and as the communist party had not yet opened an outpost in the town, it was not considered to exist officially and was not included on maps of the region.
Residents of Orbita employed to make preparations for the opening of the power plant lost their jobs and the town was quickly deserted, becoming a silent monument to the shock and terror caused by Chernobyl that reverberated through corridors of power in the Kremlin and around the world.
“There has been no heating or drinkable water here for a very long time,” Alina’s grandfather said.
“We are similar to Chernobyl, except that there is no radiation. On the contrary — we have clean forest air,” he added.
The town, which is proving a draw for the poor from other parts of Ukraine, is currently home to about 50 families who are living in the two five-story apartment blocks. Most are elderly, live without heating and gas and have to trek to a nearby village for water.
They survive, for the most part, on meager pensions and vegetables grown in their gardens.
However, their hardscrabble existence is not made any easier by another nuisance — curious tourists who come to snap pictures of the peculiar town and who have decided to make it their home.
Kristina, a 19-year-old student from Uzhhorod, a city near Ukraine’s western border with Slovakia, came with a group of friends looking for a thrill.
“We wanted to visit Chernobyl, but it is very expensive. You can get here for free and there is no radiation,” she said.
“I was intrigued by the atmosphere of this ghost town,” she said. “It is like being in a post-apocalyptic movie.”
However, Limarchenko is hardly impressed.
“Do we look like ghosts?” he asked glumly. “The real ghost towns are now in the separatist east, in the places we came from.”
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