It is now home to unused and abandoned buildings including businesses, housing, hospitals and other structures. Some of the guys I was with likened it to Silent Hill - it's only lacking only the nurses with knives.
Sorry for the broken English.Pripyat is a wonderful example of what will happend to our civilization if people leave their cities. Always wanted to go to Pripyat for a tour.
Stories of ghost children seeped out like the radiation. But today, save for the startling emergence of wildlife, Pripyat remains a ghost town. The tours need to be booked in advance with the tour operators since all of the tours are regulated. It’s called the Pripyat River and it winds through the Belarus as well as Polesiye. When you visit the area, you’ll actually have the honor of seeing the Chernobyl Power Plant in person, from the outside of course.During the duration of your tour, you will see the Pripyat pool as well as the Pripyat Amusement Park. Radiation can be dangerous and affect your health. You can also have the opportunity to see the river boats on the Pripyat River. Proud member of Chernobyl Tour Operator AssociationProud member of Chernobyl Tour Operator Association
"Hospital are especially haunting in the town which was once home to 50,000 people.Anton explained: "The hospital I took pictures in was terrible. Pripyat in Ukraine remains one of the most notorious ghost towns in the world, blighted by its proximity to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
Thousands of people from all corners of the world have done just this, just to set their sight on the famous plant.If you’re planning to visit Pripyat, there are tours you can get to see the city as well as its surrounding towns.
Pripyat is now a city of ghosts and despite no-one living there, has it’s own grace and atmosphere.
Pripyat was a thriving city with many of its tens of thousands of residents working at the nearby Chernobyl power plant, now it is nothing but an abandoned ghost townThirty four years ago Chernobyl's fourth reactor exploded, spewing deadly radiation around the world in the deadliest nuclear explosion the world has ever seen.The disaster is directly responsible for 31 people but many hundreds, if not thousands, more became seriously ill and lost their lives in the aftermath.The explosion was caused by what should have been a routine test - but its impact was immediate and the aftermath has stretched over the following decades.The 1986 disaster saw huge plumes of radiative smoke threaten to cover the whole of Europe and beyond. Boards on the road with their names and a village map commemorate the abandoned villages.