Skrunda, Soviet Ghost Town, Sold At Auction In Latvia

ROMANS KOKSAROVS and GARY PEACH | 02/ 5/10 03:44 PM | AP

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Skrunda

SKRUNDA, Latvia — Latvia sold a deserted town built around a Soviet-era radar station to a Russian investor who bid $3.1 million at an unusual auction Friday, officials said.

The town formerly known as Skrunda-1 housed about 5,000 people during the Cold War but was abandoned over a decade ago after the Russian military withdrew from Latvia following the Soviet collapse.

A representative of a Russian investor won the bidding contest in Latvia's capital, Riga, with an offer of 1.55 million lats ($3.1 million), said Anete Fridensteina-Bridina, a spokeswoman for the Baltic country's privatization agency. She said the buyer was Aleksejevskoje-Serviss, a Russia-based firm, though she could not provide details.

It wasn't immediately clear what plans the buyer had for the 110-acre (45 hectare) property, which is located in western Latvia about 95 miles (150 kilometers) from Riga. The town contains about 70 dilapidated buildings, including apartment blocks, a school, barracks and an officers' club.

Built in the 1980s, Skrunda-1 was a secret settlement not marked on Soviet maps because of the two enormous radar installations that listened to objects in space and monitored the skies for a U.S. nuclear missile attack. Like all clandestine towns in the Soviet Union, it was kept off maps and given a code-name – which usually consisted of a number and the name of a nearby city.

After the Soviet Union fractured in 1991, a newly independent Latvia was eager to scuttle all Soviet military bases and expel Russian troops. Russia's Defense Ministry, however, continued to rely on Skrunda's early warning system, and as a result the radar base was for years used as a negotiation tool between Washington and Moscow.

One of the radar buildings – dubbed Pechora – was enormous, soaring 60 meters (180 feet). In May 1995, it was ceremoniously blown up by a U.S. demolition firm using over a ton of dynamite.

Finally, in 1998 the last residents of Skrunda-1 departed, leaving behind hundreds of vacant apartments and dozens of buildings. Talk about transforming the town into a recreational area went nowhere, and finally two years ago Latvia's government decided to put the entire settlement on the auction block.

Sarmite Stradniece, a resident of Skrunda, which is 3 miles (5 kilometers) south of Skrunda-1, praised the idea to sell the former military base. "They need to restore that place and let some people live there," she said.

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The fact that the town was sold to a Russian investor is bound to bother nationalists in Latvia, who are leery of Russian capital buying real estate in the tiny Baltic state, but privatizations officials insisted the sale was a success.

"It fetched 10 times the starting price," Fridensteina-Bridina said, "and finally something can be done with the town."

___

Gary Peach reported from Riga.

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SKRUNDA, Latvia — Latvia sold a deserted town built around a Soviet-era radar station to a Russian investor who bid $3.1 million at an unusual auction Friday, officials said. The town formerly ...
SKRUNDA, Latvia — Latvia sold a deserted town built around a Soviet-era radar station to a Russian investor who bid $3.1 million at an unusual auction Friday, officials said. The town formerly ...
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vascopyjama   08:54 AM on 2/10/2010
That's what some of our cities would look like if Wall Street had their way.
chaimschwartz   09:29 PM on 2/09/2010
Is this the new hdqtrs. of the TEA PARTY in America... it looks as blank as the minds of their members??? Sarah Palin would fit right in,coming from Wasilla, Alaska. ..and all that!!
jasev01   03:28 PM on 2/09/2010
Its look like the map in Modern warefare
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LiberalLee   06:21 PM on 2/07/2010
Great. Now what do you do with it?
It's 10 steps down from a dump.
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F4Phantom   04:01 PM on 2/07/2010
Why did they use a picture of Detroit?
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hippie4ever   12:45 PM on 2/07/2010
Shabby Chic, Soviet style.
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redsongia   11:17 AM on 2/07/2010
Can't wait to see "flip that house" -- Soviet Sattelite edition.
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Oleg1   08:40 AM on 2/07/2010
So lemme get it straight. After Russians evacuated the town, It was sold ...... drum-roll... to. a Russian company.
mrjames1   04:24 AM on 2/07/2010
The third would look like a random top twenty womens tennis player. Cristancho can figure it out by rolling his d20 from Dungeons and Dragons, the omission was on purpose.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad   04:45 PM on 2/06/2010
Skrunda...sounds pretty....not
Spencaa   03:03 PM on 2/06/2010
Creepy
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FirstBiteBooks   03:27 PM on 2/06/2010
It's called capitalism.
BorisPutinov   01:15 PM on 2/06/2010
Tobarich.
I have it in good account that the whole country of Latvia is going to be put up for sale soon.
Sealed bids only.
Some of my Tobarich here in the Motherland are already planning their bid and its selection.
Could Estonia be far behind ?
We have not gone away Tobarich, we are right next door enjoying ourselves.

Boris
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidwayneosedach   12:21 PM on 2/06/2010
What's planned end use? A factory town? A private jail?
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Eric Lusito   10:01 AM on 2/06/2010
I was first time at the Skrunda Soviet base in 2004.
The place is guarded by the police and I was not able to visit more than the check-point, but it was very interesting.

In 2007 I got official permission of the Latvian authorities and I visited the complex.
I photographed what seemed most interesting places, testimonies of the Soviet era.
The sport hall was one of this, with the large slogan on the wall "Victory starts here !"
I have one of this photograph, you can look:

http://ericlusito.com/abandoned-soviet-military-bases/11-sports-victory-starts-here-skrunda-pechora-hen-house-radar-ballistic-missile.html

Now I wonder what the new owner will do from this place...
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ibsteve2u   02:16 PM on 2/06/2010
Judging from your picture (which is a good photo) the first thing the buyer will have to do is repair the leaky roofs and paint the place.
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Eric Lusito   03:21 PM on 2/06/2010
Yes, they will face major repairs and renovations, but I would like they keep the murals, it's History.
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Eric Lusito   03:26 PM on 2/06/2010
On the small photo above we can not see very well but on the building on the right is painted a big a fresco with the portrait of Lenin, a soldier and a ballistic missile...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chuck prebys   12:57 AM on 2/08/2010
Thanks for the pics.
I've never been to Russia and probably never will but am fascinated with how austere the landscape and buildings are from the old days.
There are many secret towns and much history there that I could spend hours looking at on Google earth.
I can sense how drab life must have been there from your pictures.
Thanks again.
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Jean-Marc Liotier   09:32 AM on 2/06/2010
More historical information, including satellite pictures at http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/world/russia/skrunda.htm

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