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When you think of the perfect little town to live in what comes to mind? I think of a picturesque small town surrounded by huge trees and mountains. Beautiful blue skies and nicely manicured lawns. I think of small mom and pop stores ran by the citizens of the community where people enjoy helping each other. The town would have a nice library, grocery store, hospital as well as the other conveniences we have come to rely on. There is such a place and it is beautiful. It’s a small town on the northeastern coast of British Columbia, Canada. The name of this almost perfect town is Kitsault B.C. I say almost perfect because one very important part of this town is missing. The most important part in fact, the people. Kitsault B.C. is a town with a very unique story. A sad story that is fading away like the fall leaves that cover the grounds before winter.
Kitsault British Columbia was founded and built by the U.S. mining conglomerate Phelps Dodge in 1979.
The town was built to sustain a mining operation for Molybdenum, which is a metal used in steel production.
At its peak the town housed over 1,200 residents, and had a hospital, a sports center, a theater, a grocery store with the promise of growth and prosperity.
Only 18 months after the town was opened, the price of molybdenum crashed and residents were forced to leave.
Phelps Dodge purchased the homes back from the residents and asked them to leave. Some were forcefully removed from their new homes and the once booming town was seemingly closed over night.
Everything was simply abandoned, as it would have been more expensive to sell it off than to just leave it behind.
The books were even left on the shelves of the library.
After the last person left the town, it was completely vacant however, somebody left the power on. The power has been on for nearly 30 years and the town sits very well preserved waiting for its residents to return.
Due to the lack of funds, people only were able to pack their personal belongings. Everything else was left behind.
You have to follow a long dirt road to enter the town which still stands in the middle of nowhere.
Everything is covered in late 1970′s decor and the names of the champions are still written in chalk on a board in the sports center.
The town’s backdrop is one anyone would be envious of. The place is stunning!
Kitsault has 94 homes, 200 apartments, a hospital, a shopping mall, a movie theater, a town and country restaurant and a sports center.
All the homes are completely vacant.
This place looks like a northeastern paradise!
With the homes and structures being only 3 years old at the time of vacancy, they are all in very good condition to this day.
There must be quite an eerie feeling walking down the streets of Kitsault.
But I would love to live in a place like this!
Photographer Chad Grahm is the only one in the town on this photo shoot.
An empty playground outside the school was once full of little children having a great time.
Not even a year after this plaque was made, the town was closed.
The electricity still lights the town up at night.
Everything in Kitsault was purchased brand new and just sits deteriorating now.
Can you imagine 1200 people just up and leaving after only 3 years?
Even at the end of a dock in the bay sits a lonely boat tied up waiting for its driver.
The old refining plant that sparked the construction of this town sits empty and unproductive.
Over 200 apartments without residents.
Even the town center which provided phenomenal views of the surrounding landscape looks as if it’s ready to move in and start a party.
The bridge to Kitsault once had hundreds of cars a day crossing and now it’s a rare sight to see this bridge in use.
Kitsault went up for sale in 2004 and was purchased for $5 million dollars. Canadian entrepreneur and businessman Krishnan Suthanthiran purchased the town sight unseen. He had just found an article in the newspaper and sent a check.
He had hopes of turning the town into a sort of retreat for intellectuals, scientists and doctors to work together.
The town was to be opened in 2011 but things have since changed.
There are talks about opening a natural gas plant in Kitsault but that would require an investment of $30 billion to get off the ground.
This leaves the plan open as investors are sought after for this large venture
The housing and infrastructure are already in place and something needs to happen to breathe life back into this beautiful town.
It is tragic that this beautiful little place on earth was left abandoned but at least there are talks of revamping this little town. With so much character and such a beautiful landscape, it would sure be a shame to leave it all alone to rot.
Hopefully Kitsault has a better future than the island town, Holland Island, that eventually sunk to the bottom ocean. (click here if you missed it)
Looks like some jammy contractor has a contract for an occasional mowing here and there...
.. must be weird there though.
One would think a TV series or something would have leapt at the oppurtunity to film there or something ?
.. Still $30 Billion eh ?
..... Kickstarter for "Dakkaville" maybe then folks ?
Be a bit rough at the start and it would all end in fire, blood and tiger semen but for the three or four hours before people started eating each other it would be delightful.
.. Although from a UK perspective it looks perhaps a bit too sunny and bright
The poor man really has a stake in the country. The rich man hasn't; he can go away to New Guinea in a yacht. The poor have sometimes objected to being governed badly; the rich have always objected to being governed at all
We love our superheroes because they refuse to give up on us. We can analyze them out of existence, kill them, ban them, mock them, and still they return, patiently reminding us of who we are and what we wish we could be.
"the play's the thing wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king,
Who owns all of that?
Who pays for the electricity?
Who owns that boat?
If no one owns it can I have it?
If I can't have the boat, why?
If I can't have it no one will!
Dakka Bingo! By Ouze "You are the best at flying things"-Kanluwen
"Further proof that Purple is a fething brilliant super villain " -KingCracker
"Purp.. Im pretty sure I have a gun than can reach you...."-Nicorex
"That's not really an apocalypse. That's just Europe."-Grakmar
"almost as good as winning free cake at the tea drinking contest for an Englishman." -Reds8n
Seal up your lips and give no words but mum.
Equip, Reload. Do violence.
Watch for Gerry.
The mining company owns it, I suppose.
The electricity is an oddity, though. I doubt it's renewable, like a wind farm on the hill or something. Not back then.
Clever idea...
Now about the boat. Do the mining company own that as well?
Dakka Bingo! By Ouze "You are the best at flying things"-Kanluwen
"Further proof that Purple is a fething brilliant super villain " -KingCracker
"Purp.. Im pretty sure I have a gun than can reach you...."-Nicorex
"That's not really an apocalypse. That's just Europe."-Grakmar
"almost as good as winning free cake at the tea drinking contest for an Englishman." -Reds8n
Seal up your lips and give no words but mum.
Equip, Reload. Do violence.
Watch for Gerry.
Armies: Space Marines, IG, Tyranids, Eldar, Necrons, Orks, Dark Eldar.
I am the best 40k player in my town, I always win! Of course, I am the only player of 40k in my town.
Without any work there, as a town, it'd just fail again.
Kitsault needs the usual reasons to exist, whether a road goes through it, it has a source of resources, or is in a really nice area.
The resort sounds like the best reason to start up again. Moving people in isn't enough.
Yes, because it turns out that the cost of a building is only a tiny part of the difficulty in providing someone with housing. If you give a homeless person a house in the middle of nowhere they're still going to be unemployed and need constant help getting food, electricity, etc. If you plan to solve homelessness is to give out free houses then you'd be better off building some apartments that are closer to civilization and could be more than just a convenient box to store all the homeless people where nobody has to see them anymore.
There is no such thing as a hobby without politics. "Leave politics at the door" is itself a political statement, an endorsement of the status quo and an attempt to silence dissenting voices.
Considering how large Russia is that's hardly a surprise.
Dakka Bingo! By Ouze "You are the best at flying things"-Kanluwen
"Further proof that Purple is a fething brilliant super villain " -KingCracker
"Purp.. Im pretty sure I have a gun than can reach you...."-Nicorex
"That's not really an apocalypse. That's just Europe."-Grakmar
"almost as good as winning free cake at the tea drinking contest for an Englishman." -Reds8n
Seal up your lips and give no words but mum.
Equip, Reload. Do violence.
Watch for Gerry.