Abandoned pioneer camps (41 photos)
After the collapse of the USSR, the number of abandoned children's camps increased significantly. This can be explained in different ways: firstly, a modern child has more activities in the family and at home. Secondly, due to the demographic situation, there are, in principle, fewer children than in Soviet times. Finally, some camps did not survive the crisis or were simply plundered.
Be that as it may, looking at these photographs, you involuntarily ask the question from the song: where does childhood go?
Belgorod region, camp near the village of Volokonovka

Novomikhailovsky village, Tuapse district, Krasnodar region.

Balashikha, Moscow region

Balashikha, Moscow region

Balashikha, Moscow region

Permian

Camp named after Shura and Zoya Kosmodemyanskikh, Svetlogorsk, Kaliningrad region.

Camp named after Shura and Zoya Kosmodemyanskikh, Svetlogorsk, Kaliningrad region.

Nizhny Novgorod region, city of Chkalovsk.
Abandoned children's camp named after Valery Pavlovich Chkalov on the Yug River.

Moscow region, Lyubertsy district

Moscow region, Lyubertsy district

Moscow region, Lyubertsy district

Moscow region

Kazan.

Kazan. Cool. Abandoned camp.

Children's abandoned camp, Krasnodar region, Novomikhailovsky village

Children's abandoned camp, Krasnodar region, Novomikhailovsky village

Children's abandoned camp, Krasnodar region, Novomikhailovsky village

Remains of a camp in the Nizhny Novgorod region

Remains of a camp in the Nizhny Novgorod region

Abandoned pioneer camp "Young Cosmonaut", Kostroma district, Kostroma region

Abandoned pioneer camp "Young Cosmonaut", Kostroma district, Kostroma region

Shebekino, Belgorod region.

Shebekino, Belgorod region.

Shebekino, Belgorod region.

Mordovia. Abandoned camp "Star"

The building of a former bathhouse in a children's camp. Leningrad region.

Right there, view from the hill

Abandoned camp "Forest Fairy Tale" in the Sverdlovsk region

Summer camp in the Yaroslavl region, on the border of the Myshkinsky and Rybinsk districts. The camp was abandoned after a strong hurricane: it was decided that it was inappropriate to restore it.



Abandoned pioneer camp "Yunost" in Solotch, Ryazan region

Moscow region.

Leningrad region, Gatchina district

Abandoned camp "Verkhovyna" in Lviv region, Ukraine. Founded as a holiday home in the 19th century, when it was still the territory of Austria-Hungary. In the sixties it was converted into a pioneer camp, which operated until the end of the 2000s.


Tyumen region.


Remains of a painting of a swimming pool in an abandoned camp near the village of Zvenigorod, Lviv region, Ukraine

Krasnoyarsk region










