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User / Timster1973 - thanks for the 21 million views! / Sets / Reactor 5 CNPP Cooling Tower - April 2015
Tim Knifton / 3 items

N 57 B 8.2K C 5 E Apr 8, 2015 F Apr 13, 2015
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The unfinished cooling tower of Reactor 5 at Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. The platforms at the top were made out of metal frames with wood planks. Much of this was either hanging down or on the ground. The size and accoustics of this place were amazing.

Previous set of Pripyat here www.flickr.com/photos/timster1973/sets/72157643944616235/

Named for the nearby Pripyat River, Pripyat was founded on 4 February 1970, the ninth nuclear city in the Soviet Union, for the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. It was officially proclaimed a city in 1979, and had grown to a population of 49,360 before being evacuated a few days after the 26 April 1986 Chernobyl disaster.

Though Pripyat is located within the administrative district of Ivankiv Raion, the abandoned city now has a special status within the larger Kiev Oblast (province), being administered directly from Kiev. Pripyat is also supervised by Ukraine's Ministry of Emergencies, which manages activities for the entire Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.

Access to Pripyat, unlike cities of military importance, was not restricted before the disaster as nuclear power stations were seen by the Soviet Union as safer than other types of power plants. Nuclear power stations were presented as being an achievement of Soviet engineering, where nuclear power was harnessed for peaceful projects. The slogan "peaceful atom" (Russian: mirnyj atom) was popular during those times. The original plan had been to build the plant only 25 km (16 mi) from Kiev, but the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, among other bodies, expressed concern about it being too close to the city. As a result, the power station and Pripyat were built at their current locations, about 100 km (62 mi) from Kiev. After the disaster the city of Pripyat was evacuated in two days.

My blog:

timster1973.wordpress.com

Also on Facebook

www.Facebook.com/TimKniftonPhotography

online store: www.artfinder.com/tim-knifton

instagram: instagram.com/timster_1973

Tags:   Ukraine Chernobyl Pripyat Prypyat Derelict Decay Urbex UE Urban exploration Urban wandering Tim Knifton Timster1973 Tim Knifton Canon Europe European exploration Explore Exploration Nuclear Disaster Nuclear Disaster Decaying Forgotten Forgot Tragedy HDR Photomatix High Dynamic Range Photo Photography Neglected Abandon Abandoned Abandonment Rot Rotten Rotting Beautiful Decay Beauty in Decay Decayed and Abandoned Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster Old Still Silent Empty Dereliction Team Moon Whistle Ghost town The forgotten Taking back Exclusion Zone radioactive Cooling Tower Cooling Tower Industrial Industry Decayed Fisheye Sigma 15mm Perspective Distortion Perspective Sigma Fisheye 15mm F2.8 F2.8 2.8 Full Frame Fisheye Sigma Fisheye Sigma 15mm F2.8 Fisheye Sigma F2.8 HDR Fisheye

N 32 B 14.2K C 2 E Apr 8, 2015 F May 4, 2015
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Construction of reactors number 5 and 6 continued throughout the night of the explosion at the 4th Chernobyl nuclear power plant. If the glow of the fire wasn’t visible from the upper levels then as dawn broke the smoke must have been.

Despite the disaster unfolding next door at 8am that morning the 286 construction workers of the day shift clocked on. Construction work on 5 and 6 was soon stopped but resumed again on the 10th October 1986. Six months later on the 24 April 1987 work was once again halted and on May 23 1989 the decision was made not to complete the reactors.

The Power Plants are located approximately 18 km north west of the City of Chernobyl. Reactor Number 1 was completed in 1977 and followed by Reactor Number 2 in 1978, Number 3 in 1981, and Number 4 in 1983.

Reactor Number 5 was approximately 70% complete at the time of the accident. The 6th was scheduled for completion in 1994. When functioning Reactors 5 and 6 would have been capable of producing 1,000 MW’s each.

My blog:

timster1973.wordpress.com

Also on Facebook

www.Facebook.com/TimKniftonPhotography

online store: www.artfinder.com/tim-knifton

instagram: instagram.com/timster_1973

Tags:   Ukraine Chernobyl Derelict Decay Urbex UE Urban exploration Urban wandering Tim Knifton Timster1973 Tim Knifton Canon Europe European exploration Explore Exploration Nuclear Disaster Nuclear Disaster Decaying Forgotten Forgot Tragedy HDR Photomatix High Dynamic Range Photo Photography Neglected Abandon Abandoned Abandonment Rot Rotten Rotting Beautiful Decay Beauty in Decay Decayed and Abandoned Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster Old Still Silent Empty Dereliction Team Moon Whistle Ghost town The forgotten Taking back Exclusion Zone radioactive radiation reactor Nuclear Reactor Chernobyl Nuclear Reactor 5 Reactor 5 CNPP Reactor 5 Industry Industrial Industrial decay Incomplete Corridor Stripped Metal Desolate Light

N 39 B 3.6K C 3 E Apr 8, 2015 F Jun 15, 2015
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Tried taking this with a regular wide angle and it just wasn't the same. The huge perspective that is the cooling tower in the same neighbourhood as Reactor 5.

Construction of reactors number 5 and 6 continued throughout the night of the explosion at the 4th Chernobyl nuclear power plant. If the glow of the fire wasn’t visible from the upper levels then as dawn broke the smoke must have been.

Despite the disaster unfolding next door at 8am that morning the 286 construction workers of the day shift clocked on. Construction work on 5 and 6 was soon stopped but resumed again on the 10th October 1986. Six months later on the 24 April 1987 work was once again halted and on May 23 1989 the decision was made not to complete the reactors.

The Power Plants are located approximately 18 km north west of the City of Chernobyl. Reactor Number 1 was completed in 1977 and followed by Reactor Number 2 in 1978, Number 3 in 1981, and Number 4 in 1983.

Reactor Number 5 was approximately 70% complete at the time of the accident. The 6th was scheduled for completion in 1994. When functioning Reactors 5 and 6 would have been capable of producing 1,000 MW’s each.

My blog:

timster1973.wordpress.com

Also on Facebook

www.Facebook.com/TimKniftonPhotography

online store: www.artfinder.com/tim-knifton

instagram: instagram.com/timster_1973


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