Located in Moscow, this abandoned hospital is a popular spot for urban explorers. Construction began in 1980 but was never finished due to funding problems.
Though located in Ukraine, some Russian areas near the border remain part of the exclusion zone and are similarly abandoned due to the Chernobyl disaster.
Once one of the largest man-made holes on Earth, this mine in Siberia was abandoned after it became too dangerous to continue operations.
A coal mining town in the Russian Far East abandoned after a deadly explosion in the 1990s.
Located on Sakhalin Island, this lighthouse is built on a rock and is completely abandoned but still stands dramatically against the sea.
Used during the Cold War, this military base was eventually abandoned and now sits as a relic of the Soviet era.
This medieval fortress has areas that are no longer maintained, offering a glimpse into forgotten history.
Old sections of this massive industrial complex have been left to decay since the end of the Soviet Union.
An abandoned Soviet mining town in the Arctic Circle, preserved like a ghost town museum.
Parts of the Mayak nuclear site are abandoned and still dangerous due to radiation.
A former industrial village in Quebec, abandoned after the pulp mill closed in the 1920s.
A tuberculosis hospital in British Columbia, closed in the 1980s and now known for ghost tours.
Once a coal mining town in Alberta's Banff National Park, abandoned in the 1920s.
A planned mining city that thrived in the 60s and 70s but was completely dismantled after the mine closed.
Newfoundland’s first cast-iron lighthouse, long since decommissioned and left standing quietly on the cliffs.
Abandoned remains of the once-active zoo inside Vancouver’s famous Stanley Park.
Near Thunder Bay, this once-rich silver mining town was swallowed by Lake Superior.
A former tuberculosis sanatorium in Saskatchewan now used occasionally as a music camp and for film shoots.
Abandoned camp in Ontario known for its eerie cabins and overgrown grounds.
Parts of this WWII-era military base in Ontario remain unused and overgrown.