Deserted buildings seen in Skrunda

Deserted buildings seen in Skrunda, a Soviet ghost town, Latvia, Friday, Feb. 5, 2010. (AP Photo/Roman Koksarov)

Large Map
  • More News
FBI: Robber is 'tall, dark, handsome'
FBI: Robber is 'tall, dark, handsome'

Bank surveillance photos provided Friday show a suspect, …

Sheep herding Swedish bunny becomes online hit
Sheep herding bunny becomes online hit

Champis the bunny doesn't only hop — he also knows how to herd …

Mont. man starts police chase as part of wishlist
Man gets his wish to be in police chase

A 55-year-old Montana man who says he "always wanted" to be …

Pew study: Facebook users get more than they give
Facebook users get more than they give

The goody-two-shoes among us say it's better to give than to …

Inmate adds pig image to Vt. police cruiser decals
Inmate adds pig image to police decals

A prison inmate who makes stationery and license plates pulled …

Advertisement

Ghost town auctioned off for $3.1M

Housed about 5,000 people during the Cold War

Updated: Friday, 05 Feb 2010, 1:12 PM EST
Published : Friday, 05 Feb 2010, 1:12 PM EST

SKRUNDA, Latvia (AP) - Latvia on Friday sold a deserted town built around a Soviet-era radar station to a Russian investor who bid $3.1 million at an unusual auction, 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 declined to name the buyer.

It wasn't immediately clear what plans the buyer had for the 110-acre (45 hectare) property, which is located in western Latvia some 95 miles (150 kilometers) from Riga.

It contains about 70 dilapidated buildings, including apartment blocks, a school, barracks, and an officers' club.

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.

The Russian military dismantled the radar facilities and vacated the town after the Soviet Union fell apart and Russian troops left Latvia.

Privatization officials hailed the sale, saying it fetched ten times the starting price and signaled a new beginning for the abandoned town.

___

Peach reported from Riga.

  • Comments

Advertisement
  • Photo Galleries

Photos: Celebrity Super Bowl Picks

Athletes, movie stars, singers and more predict the outcome of the big game.

Advertisement

 

Advertisement