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The Russian ghost town & a time capsule in the making

Nikola Petrovski
Left: Abandoned mining equipment. Photo Credit: Frode Bjorshol, CC BY 2.0. Right: The northernmost monument to Vladimir Lenin. Photo Credit: Christopher Michel, CC BY 2.0
Left: Abandoned mining equipment. Photo Credit: Frode Bjorshol, CC BY 2.0. Right: The northernmost monument to Vladimir Lenin. Photo Credit: Christopher Michel, CC BY 2.0

Located on the archipelago of Svalbard, Norway, this Russian settlement and coal-mining community bears a rather unusual name for a town located almost on the top of the globe.

Called Пирамида in Russian, it was initially founded by Sweden in 1910 and was later sold to the Soviet Union in 1927.

This now-abandoned town rests at the foot of the Billefjorden on the island of Spitsbergen. The name given to this town is the same as the name of the mountain in whose shadow Pyramiden lies.

Where seagulls find their peace. Photo Credit: Kitty Terwolbeck, CC BY 2.0
Where seagulls find their peace. Photo Credit: Kitty Terwolbeck, CC BY 2.0

To show how remote this mining town is, one can use the fact that the closest settlement is some 50 km to the south, where Svalbard’s capital, Longyearbyen, is located.

The perfectly preserved interior. Photo Credit: Kitty Terwolbeck, CC BY 2.0
The perfectly preserved interior. Photo Credit: Kitty Terwolbeck, CC BY 2.0

The owner of this town is the Arktikugol Trust – a state-owned mining company that ran Pyramiden, allowing some 1000 residents to live and work here during its heyday.

Abandoned mining equipment. Photo Credit: Frode Bjorshol, CC BY 2.0
Abandoned mining equipment. Photo Credit: Frode Bjorshol, CC BY 2.0

The town was more than successful and for some 70 years, it did what it could do best – extract coal. But when the last piece of coal was removed so was the future of this little town, and on 31 March 1998 that’s exactly what happened.

The last resident to permanently leave the mining site was on 10th October of that same year. Once you enter the derelict buildings and houses, one cannot help but get a sort of a ghastly feeling, as if time itself decided to slow down to an almost complete halt.

Inside one of the buildings in Pyramiden. Photo Credit: Christopher Michel, CC BY 2.0
Inside one of the buildings in Pyramiden. Photo Credit: Christopher Michel, CC BY 2.0

Up until 2007, almost nothing had been moved and was to be found on the exact spot where it was left by its rightful owner, as if someone chased the residents of Pyramiden out of their homes in a hurry.

The interior of one of the buildings. Photo Credit: Frode Bjorshol, CC BY 2.0
The interior of one of the buildings. Photo Credit: Frode Bjorshol, CC BY 2.0

Kjartan Fløgstad, a Norwegian author wrote a book that immortalizes Pyramiden, and The History Channel made a documentary called Life After People which featured this town. The real thrill comes when one finds out that due to the rare climate surrounding this mining town, it is almost impossible for the buildings to decay.

Furthermore, scientific research has proven that the buildings would hold their ground and be visible for the next 500 years to come.

A house made of bottles. Photo Credit: Kitty Terwolbeck, CC BY 2.0
A house made of bottles. Photo Credit: Kitty Terwolbeck, CC BY 2.0

Another eye opener related to this town is that in the auditorium of the cultural center in Pyramiden one can find the Красный октябрь or Red October, the world’s northernmost grand piano.

Red October the Northernmost piano. Photo Credit: Kitty Terwolbeck, CC BY 2.0
Red October the Northernmost piano. Photo Credit: Kitty Terwolbeck, CC BY 2.0
The northernmost monument to Vladimir Lenin. Photo Credit: Christopher Michel, CC BY 2.0
The northernmost monument to Vladimir Lenin. Photo Credit: Christopher Michel, CC BY 2.0

And if this is not enough, Pyramiden also has the northernmost monument to Vladimir Lenin and the world’s northernmost swimming pool.

The only way one can reach this northern mining town is by boat or by snowmobile. Entering the buildings is forbidden without an official permit.