nibot ([personal profile] nibot) wrote2004-09-15 08:02 pm
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USSR Missile Silo (Sept. 2003)

Lithuania Diary: We arranged a trip on Friday with Jurga from the hostel, who served as driver, translator, and guide, taking us on an all day roadtrip to sites in Western Lithuania. We climbed down into an abandoned Soviet missile base, peered down into the silos, some thirty meters deep. It's deep in a forest, and it took some time to be discovered by the Lithuanians after the soviet troops abandoned it. It was stripped of anything of value, and thereafter just open for the exploring. Now they've installed fluorescent lighting and you need to get a key from the national park office, but, well, in Kenny's words, "The lack of concern for safety is refreshing."

This particular missile complex is located somewhere in the middle of Lithuania. Built in secret by the USSR, four silos here housed missiles aimed for the United States, until those missiles were removed—and allegedly shipped to Cuba, precipitating the Crisis. Abandoned, the complex was discovered by locals, who stripped away just about anything of value that could be carried off, from machinery to scrap metal. About the only thing left is a huge diesel engine block.

The whole complex is underground except for the silo lids. There are four missile silos surrounding an underground living area and control center. Here's what it looks like on the surface.

One of the four silos:

Entrance to the command center:

Warnings on the door:

Inside:

Electrical generator:

Some more warnings:

Entering one of the missile bays:

The silo:

[identity profile] bom.livejournal.com 2004-09-15 06:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Creepy stuff! Especially the skull and crossbones warning sign.

I took a tour of a missile silo in Arizona a couple of years ago. It was the one used in that semi-recent Star Trek movie. Anyway, it was really cool in a this-thing-was-designed-to-obliterate-people sort of way. I remember there being a fenced-in lockdown area before the control room which was designed so that anyone coming in who shouldn't be could be shot before reaching the control room (which was mounted on giant springs to absorb a nuclear explosion).

[identity profile] nebulousmaze.livejournal.com 2004-09-15 07:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Sweet! Did you get to meet any old time mathematicians or physicists who worked in this thing? That would be exciting.

[identity profile] axewound.livejournal.com 2004-09-16 08:21 am (UTC)(link)
awesome pictures, this makes me want to explore more of MCAS EL Toro

[identity profile] fireflies100k.livejournal.com 2004-09-16 07:38 pm (UTC)(link)
How eerie! Especially the "inside" picture. I wonder what the belt picture is supposed to indicate.

Am I correct in the impression that you could pretty much just walk around and look at all this stuff, without being charged admission or shown around or anything? I thought that was one of the most interesting things when I went to Panama--certain sires that, in the US, would be super touristy, were just sort of sitting there unattended. There was a pirate fort built out of coral blocks that you could just walk around in.

Very interesting

[identity profile] straight.livejournal.com 2004-09-17 10:55 am (UTC)(link)
It's very interesting - a view of former USSR legacy stuff by somebody from the West. Thanks.

BTW, do you know what's written above the entrance to the command center?