Подземная база подводных лодок, часть I

Apr 05, 2006 03:09

Подземная база подводных лодок, часть I.
Кое-какую информацию нужно прочитать тут и тут. Да и вообще весь сайт советую изучить - ОЧЕНЬ интересно.

Upd1: The small description on English
Upd2:The big description on EnglishТеперь собственно про саму базу подлодок или объект 825 кратко (выдержкка из буклета на украинском языке ( Read more... )

панорама, вода, подземелья, industrial, объект 825, Крым, Балаклава

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Clarification for other English speakers anonymous July 29 2006, 07:50:34 UTC
For some of the other English-speakers who've stumbled across these photos from other sites and haven't browsed some of the other comments, it's a decommissioned Russian nuclear sub base in Balaklava, a town in Crimea, Ukraine. Apparently it was designed to be virtually indestructible, even against a direct nuclear impact. When the Soviet Union collapsed in '91 the torpedoes and low-yield nuclear warheads were removed, and in '96 when the last sub was moved from the base it was converted into a museum.

And to russos, these are some pretty amazing photos. Looking at them while listening to the soundtrack to Riven was very unsettling-definitely a neat experience. Thanks for posting them for all to see!

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Re: Clarification for other English speakers russos July 31 2006, 11:59:13 UTC
Thanks!

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Re: Clarification for other English speakers kaiiak November 13 2006, 21:19:02 UTC
спасибо!
I'm trying to learn russian, but this was tough for me. And the pictures are so interesting that I don't have the urge to understand all the text. I just needed to know immediately. Many thanks!

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Re: Clarification for other English speakers woosang December 7 2006, 11:43:26 UTC
Thanks! The pictures are the best. I have NEVER seen a Submarine base before. What amazing pictures. Thanks for explaining in english and thanks to Russo for posting the pics!

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Re: Clarification for other English speakers anonymous December 9 2006, 12:17:48 UTC
For all the people wishing to be able to read the Russian captions, why not use an online translation tool, like: http://babelfish.altavista.com/

Thanks for the awesome photos! I'm a member of an Urban Exploration group here in Australia, and these pics make us all green with envy. There is nothing like that here.

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