The world's most fascinating abandoned towns and cities
Their empty buildings, streets and even cars have been left for nature to reclaim over the years, leaving behind spectacular-looking ghost towns.
These abandoned buildings in the old coal-mining town of Vorkuta in the Komi Republic, Russia, were covered in snow on March 6, 2021.
(CNN) -- Once thriving spots, these villages, towns and cities now stand abandoned. Their empty buildings, streets and even cars left for nature to reclaim over the years.
Whether destroyed during war, evacuated for ammunition practice or cast aside after nearby precious metals and minerals turned out to be in short supply, here are some of the world's most fascinating abandoned towns and cities.
Oradour-Sur-Glane, France

The village of Oradour-sur-Glane was the site of a horrific massacre during World War II. (Adobe Stock via CNNewsource)
The ruins of this former fishing village serve as a stark reminder of the horrors of World War II.
Oradour-Sur-Glane has been left relatively untouched since June 10, 1944, when much of its population was massacred by the Waffen SS, a military branch of the Nazi Party's SS organization.
During the atrocity, men were shot and killed in barns, while women and children were also murdered when the church they were locked in was blown up. Survivors were gunned down as they fled.
Wartime leader Charles De Gaulle later decided that Oradour-Sur-Glane should be left as a testament to Nazi cruelty.
A new village with a memorial museum, open since 1999, has been built near by.
Wharram Percy, United Kingdom

The Church of St. Martin in the Wharram Percy deserted medieval village in North Yorkshire, England, 2011. View of the ruins from across the graveyard. (English Heritage/Heritage Images/Getty Images)
Arguably England's best known deserted medieval village, Wharram Percy, found in the beautiful Yorkshire Wolds, was once home to two stunning manor houses and a church.
The latter is the only building still standing, but the foundations of the houses, built by the noble Percy family, can still be seen, as can those of the surrounding peasant homes.
The village population dwindled for years as locals moved away due to a shift towards sheep farming. It was abandoned not long after 1500, when the last remaining residents were evicted.
Today the site, now managed by English Heritage, is a major draw for archaeologists and tourists alike.
Belchite, Spain

Volunteers from several countries work to clean up and restore the streets of the old town of Belchite, near Zaragoza on July 8, 2022. (Cesar Manso/AFP via Getty Images)
On the front line between Republican and fascist forces during the Spanish Civil War, Belchite was the center of a weeks-long siege between August and September 1937, before finally falling to General Francisco Franco's forces in 1939.
Left much as it was then, the tiny village located south of Zaragoza in northeastern Spain stands as a memorial to those who fell, the ruins of its stunning church particularly affecting.
The deserted spot, where a new village, built in 1939, can be found close by, makes for an interesting day trip from Zaragoza.
Craco, Italy
Located in the far south of Italy, Craco's vertiginous location and spectacular architecture make it one of the most visually arresting abandoned towns in the world.
Residents began to leave after a series of landslides caused by sewage and water works in the 1960s, and Craco was left completely deserted in the wake of the Irpinia earthquake in 1980.
Since then, not only has the ghost town pulled in thousands of tourists, its also become an popular filming location, featuring in movies like 2008 James Bond offering "Quantum of Solace."
Grand-Bassam, Ivory Coast

In this file photo taken Oct. 27, 2015, women walk past a street in a village renowned as a tourist hot spot visited by French and other tourist yearly in Grand Bassam, Ivory Coast. (AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam, File)
While Grand-Bassam still has a thriving population, many of its most striking buildings have been empty for years.
Once the French colonial capital of Côte d'Ivoire, the resort town is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, with noted structures such as the old Post Office, Central African Bank and the Hotel de France.
The history of Grand-Bassam dates back much further than the French. The Nzema people, also known as Ndenye or Apollonians, of the Ivory Coast are thought to have lived here from the 15th century, growing the town into a lively port and fishing village before the arrival of colonists.
Kolmanskop, Namibia

In this July 23, 2013 photo, sand fills an abandoned house in Kolmanskop, Namibia. Kolmanskop was a diamond mining town south of Namibia built in 1908 and deserted in 1956. Since then, the desert slowly reclaimed its territory, with sand invading the buildings where 350 German colonists and more than 800 local workers lived during its heydays of the 1920s. (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)
With many of its buildings half-submerged in sand, Kolmanskop stands as an eerie reminder of what was once a buzzing town in the heart of the Namib desert.
Founded after local worker Zacharias Lewala discovered diamonds here in 1908, it saw a huge influx of German miners and became a bustling hub before it was finally abandoned in 1956.
Built to mimic a German town, Kolmanskop had a ballroom, a casino and even a tram system.
Tourists come here to witness how the desert has reclaimed the buildings, with the entire town slowly disappearing forever beneath the sand.

A dumping plant on the Kolmanskop Diamond fields in Namibia shown around Nov. 12, 1938. The alluvial diamond fields of Kolmanskop are 10 miles inland from Luderitz, and cover a large area. (AP Photo)
Bodie, California

The rusty remains of old automobiles, and weather-beaten buildings remind visitors to the area that Bodie, California, on Nov. 19, 1985, was once a thriving community. (AP Photo/Walt Zeboski)
Perhaps the most famous of the Wild West boomtowns of the late 19th century, Bodie's population grew from a handful of prospectors to 10,000 people in the late 1870s.
With rich seams of gold to be found, people flocked to the Californian town, positioned near the Nevada border, to make their fortune, with an incredible 65 saloons, a Wells Fargo bank and even a Chinatown replete with Taoist temple.

This June 25, 1959 photo shows Bodie, Calif., one of the most famous ghost towns in the United States. Bodie boomed during the Gold Rush days, with an estimated 10,000 residents in 1880, more than 60 saloons and a red-light district. Once the mine shut down, so did the town, all but abandoned by the early 1900s. Today, its 100-or-so buildings are maintained by the California parks system, which protects the town in "an arrested state of decay," keeping the buildings standing but making few other alterations. (AP Photo/File)
But Bodie's appeal had faded by the early 20th century, as other boomtowns rose to prominence, and its population fell to just 120 in 1920.
The deserted town's well-preserved buildings make it a memorable stop off on Wild West tours today.
Hashima Island, Japan

Hashima Island was abandoned in 1974. (Adobe Stock via CNNewsource)
Also known as Battleship Island, Hashima, off the coast of Nagasaki, operated as an undersea coal mining facility between 1887 and 1974.
But it was cast aside as demand for coal dissipated, and nature has since taken over the buildings on the island.
While this UNESCO World Heritage site has become a significant tourist destination over the years, Hashima has a dark past.
During the period beginning in the 1930s and until the end of World War II, Koreans and others were brought to the island against their will and forced to work under harsh conditions, according to UNESCO.
Death toll figures related to that period vary widely and Hashima's history remains a source of contention in the region.
Pyramiden, Norway

Abandoned buildings in the abandoned Soviet-Russian mining settlement in Pyramiden, Norway, on Sept. 10, 2022. (Sebastian Kahnert/picture alliance via Getty Images)
Situated high above the Arctic Circle on the Svalbard archipelago, Pyramiden was once a successful coal mining settlement.
Sold to the Soviets by Sweden in 1927, the remote town is dotted with classic architecture from the Communist period, from housing blocks to a Heliport.
Coal hasn't been mined here since 1998, but tourists can now stay at a dedicated hotel and book official tours of its neglected buildings.
Those who visit Pyramiden will first need to reach the remote town of Longyearbyen, before taking a boat or snowmobile for the final stretch.

Tourists take selfies in front of the bust of Soviet revolutionary Lenin in the abandoned Soviet-Russian mining settlement in Pyramiden, Norway, on Sept. 10,, 2022. (Photo by Sebastian Kahnert/picture alliance via Getty Images)
Pripyat, Ukraine

The rusty emblem of the Soviet Union is seen on the roof of an apartment building in the ghost town of Pripyat close to the Chernobyl nuclear plant, Ukraine, on April 15, 2021. (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky, File)
Pripyat was given city status in 1979, some nine years after it was founded to house workers at the nearby Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
The Ukrainian city was home to around 50,000 people when it was evacuated on April 27, 1986, following the now infamous disaster at Chernobyl.
Tourists had been arriving here in increasing numbers, despite the dangers from nuclear fallout, before Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
But this remains a deeply melancholy place.

A Ukrainian flag flies at the monument with a sign reads "Pripyat", name of the city, in the abandoned city of Pripyat near the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, Ukraine, April 5, 2022. (AP Photo/Oleksandr Ratushniak)
In early 2020, former residents of Pripyat returned for the first time as part of celebrations to mark 50 years since it was established.
While the site reportedly fell into Russian hands during the first week of the invasion, it has since been reclaimed by Ukraine.
Tyneham, United Kingdom

In this July 8, 2018 photo, grass and nettles grow up around a row of abandoned, dilapidated cottages in the "ghost village" of Tyneham, in Dorset, England. The tiny settlement was evacuated on War Department orders in 1943, to provide more land for training ahead of D-Day in World War II. The people were never allowed to return, and it remains in military hands. Visitors are allowed in most weekends to see what is a poignant reminder of the days of WWII. (AP Photo/Jerry Harmer)
When villagers in Tyneham, in the bucolic county of Dorset, were ordered to leave by Britain's War Office in November 1943, they assumed they'd be back once World War II was over.
However, having used the village to train troops in the run up to D-Day -- the military term for the first day of the Normandy landings -- the UK government took out a compulsory purchase order in 1948.
Tyneham now serves as part of the military firing ranges that make up this part of England, although it is open to the public at weekends and on select public holidays.
Wildlife has taken over somewhat, with rare species making the most of a lack of nearby farm fields or resident human population.
Ruby, Arizona
Abandoned since 1941, a year after its once productive mine was closed, Ruby remains one of the best preserved ghost towns in the US.
Positioned close to the Mexico border, the town boomed in the 1930s, with a population of 1,200 mostly mining gold, silver, lead and zinc.
Ruby is now privately owned, and visitors can pay around $15 to spend a day exploring its derelict buildings and miles of desert trails.
The town's well preserved jail, school house and mine works make it a fascinating place to visit.
Arltunga, Australia

Deserted gold rush town Arltunga in the Northern Territory of Australia. (Adobe Stock via CNNewsource)
Billed as the first official town in the harsh outback of Central Australia, Arltunga has a long indigenous history dating back 20,000 years.
However, the ghost town that remains was built in 1887 by European settlers in search of gold, and had a population of around 300 at one stage.
While it's possible to visit Arltunga, situated east of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory, to view its well preserved mineworks and other buildings all year, it's best to go between April and September, when the weather is cooler.
Varosha, Cyprus

A girl rides her bicycle in front of an abandoned coffee shop in the recently opened ghost suburb of Varosha on Saturday, Sept. 4, 2021. (AP Photo/Nedim Enginsoy)
A once popular tourist destination in the Cypriot city of Famagusta, Varosha was abandoned in 1974 following Turkey's invasion of Cyprus.
The resort town has lain idle since then. Its apartment blocks left to crumble, its decaying streets fenced off.
However, there have been moves to reopen the area, with Turkish nationals and residents of Turkish Cyprus permitted to visit when the beach was reopened in 2021.
Inevitably, it has become a flashpoint in a conflict which has rumbled for decades, with Greek Cypriots who were forced to leave the area complaining about a lack of access.
Vorkuta, Russia

The world's most fascinating abandoned towns and cities include Russian coal-mining town Vorkuta which sits frozen in time decades after locals left it behind. (Adobe Stock via CNNewsource)
Ghost towns and villages surround Vorkuta in Russia's bitter Arctic north, a legacy of its time as a booming coal mine.
The coal here was once mined by prisoners at the area's cruel and infamous Gulag between the 1930s and 1960s.
In the years that followed, miners were enticed to this brutal place for work by high salaries.
When the mining stopped following the collapse of the Soviet Union, locals departed, leaving a series of villages that have been covered in ice and frozen in time.

Extremely cold weather in Vorkuta, Russia covered vehicles in snow and ice as far as the eye can see. (Maria Passer/Anadolu Agency via Reuters)
Kayakoy, Turkey
Preserved as a museum and designated by UNESCO as a "world friendship and peace village," Kayakoy has become something of a tourist mainstay for visitors to this southwestern corner of Turkey.
However, its abandonment speaks of the bitter conflict in the wake of World War I, when Greece and Turkey fought for control of the wider region and a population exchange led to residents being unable to return to their ancestral homes.
Houtouwan, China

This May 19, 2018, drone photo shows ruins of a building in the abandoned fishing village of Houtouwan on the remote island of Shengshan, 90 kilometers off the coast of Shanghai. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil)
It hasn't taken nature long to run wild across the abandoned buildings of Houtouwan.
Found on Shengshan Island, close to Shanghai, this once vibrant village of more than 2,000 people was left behind in the early 1990s after residents struggled to access food due to the area's remoteness and complained of issues with education.
Now the houses that rise up its hills are camouflaged beneath creeping greenery, with tourists flocking to see it up close.

This May 20, 2018, drone photo shows a building covered in ivy in the abandoned fishing village of Houtouwan on the remote island of Shengshan, 90 kilometers off the coast of Shanghai. (AP Photo/Sam McNeil, File)
Bankhead, Canada
Bankhead has the added bonus of being located in the majestic Banff National Park, based in the Rocky Mountains of Canada.
A former coal mining town of around 1,000 people, many of its works and buildings were removed after the mine was shut due to labor strikes in 1922.
But it's still possible to explore the area on an excellent interpretative hiking trail, which takes in key buildings that are still standing, as well as offering spectacular views of the surrounding mountains.
Hampi, India

The Vittala Temple, built in the early 16th century, is devoted to the Hindu god Vithoba (also known as Vitthala and Panduranga). Hampi is a village in northern Karnataka state. It is located within the ruins of Vijayanagara, the former capital of the Vijayanagara Empire. (Rainer Krack/Pictures From History/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Wandering the incredible ruins of Hampi, it's easy to imagine how this place thrived during the 14th and 15th centuries, becoming one of the largest and most important cities in the world.
The capital of the Vijayanagara Empire, it was destroyed by sultanate armies in the 16th century. Hampi's remaining, beautifully preserved forts, temples and markets helped it earn UNESCO World Heritage status in 1986.
Epecuen, Argentina

Tombs are exposed at the cemetery in the abandoned Villa Epecuen, Argentina, Sept. 11, 2021. After the adjoining lake poured through a broken embankment in 1985, the water finally drained away, leaving the ruins of the town. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
Founded on the banks of Laguna Epecuén in the 1920s, Epecuen was a resort town designed to offer weary residents of Argentina's capital city Buenos Aires a much needed break.
Drawn to its apparently restorative salt waters, visitors flocked here for years, until disaster struck in 1985.
A rare "seiche," a standing wave which occurs on a closed body of water, led to a dam bursting and the town being flooded. The water finally receded in 2009, with buildings left encrusted in salt.

Tourists walk on the main street of the abandoned village of Epecuen, Argentina, Oct. 7, 2021. The Argentine spa town was a mecca of tourism for much of the 20th century, until the adjoining lake poured through a broken embankment in 1985 and destroyed hotels, restaurants and other buildings. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
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