Yaniv railway station

Former railway station in Yaniv, Ukraine

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Chernihiv-Ovruch line
Legend
km
Korosten
Bilokorovychi
212.6
Ostriv[1]
Noryn River
T0619
0.0
Ovruch
North to Mazyr
6.1
Selyshche[2]
12.0
Hrezlia
13.8
Husarivka
Hrezlia River
22.8
Nyvky
30.5
Tychkiv
33.3
Racha
Radcha River
40.5
Vilkhova
Zhytomyr Oblast
Exclusion Zone
T1035
44.4
Vilcha
52.0
Pavlovichi
57.0
Klivini
63.0
Tovstyi Lys
71.0
Krasnytsa
76.0
Buriakivka
79.0
Shepelychi
87.0
Yaniv
Bridge of Death
91.1
Semykhody
Pripyat River
97.0
Zimovishche
105.0
Masheve
Exclusion Zone Ukraine
Radioecological Reserve Belarus
109.0
Posudovo
113.0
Kolyban
Brahinka River
118.1
Kaporenka
Peresadochna[3]
122.7
Iolcha
Dnieper River
Gomel Oblast Belarus
Chernihiv Oblast Ukraine
131.1
Nedanchychi
Chernihiv Oblast
Kyiv Oblast
Kyiv Oblast
Slavutych (city)
135.1
Selyshche Lisove
P56
139.7
Slavutych
145.6
Demiyka
Pakulka River
150.3
Maliyky
0.0
Zhidinichi
13.2
Karkhivka
157.1
20.2
Zhukotki
160.9
Levkovichi
168.1
Bilous
M01
Bilous River
173.9
Chernihiv-Pidusivka
174.6
175 km
Hornostaivka
175.5
Chernihiv
Nizhyn

Yaniv railway station[4][5] (Ukrainian: Янів, Russian: Янов), also named Yanov station,[6][7] is an abandoned Ukrainian station located in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. Sometimes referred to as Pripyat station, it lies in the village of Yaniv, south of the city of Pripyat, and is part of the Chernihiv–Ovruch railway. It is included in the transport sector state-owned enterprise Chernobylservis.

History

The station was commissioned in 1925 and the village and the station of Yaniv gave rise to the city of Pripyat.[7]

Before the 1986 accident at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant, the station belonged to Southwestern Railways. The station received passenger and freight transportation, and adjoined driveways, tank farms and other enterprises in the city of Pripyat.[8] Among the passenger traffic, it was also served by the long-distance express train Moscow-Khmelnytskyi.[9][10]

During 1986 there was a reconstruction of the railway section from Chernihiv to Yaniv to provide service to the Chornobyl staff and contractors, and the section from Yaniv to Slavutych was electrified. Prior to 2021, the section was not being used and was partly dismantled at the station and on the stretch from Yaniv–Semykhody.[6]

In 2017, the Ukrainian government decided to extend the Vilcha-Semykhody section of the Chernihiv-Ovruch railway from the previously dismantled Semykhody railway station to Vilcha for easier access to the Chornobyl New Safe Confinement of the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant. The job was given to Energoatom. One of the rail tracks passing through Yaniv was reconstructed, and construction began with two teams beginning at Vilcha and Yaniv station. On 9 July 2021 the two teams met and placed the "golden spike".[11]

Structure

In the central part of the station, there are three receiving-departure paths and devices for cargo operations. In the western part there is a locomotive column that supplied water to the locomotives.

In popular culture

The Yaniv railway station features as an important location in the 2010 PC game S.T.A.L.K.E.R: Call of Pripyat.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ in english: Island
  2. ^ in english: Town
  3. ^ in english: Transfer Point
  4. ^ Yaniv station (Lost Places)
  5. ^ The stations of the Exclusion Zone (Radioactive Railroad)
  6. ^ a b Yanov Railway Station on chernobylzone.com.ua
  7. ^ a b Yanov Railway Station on chernobyilgallery.com
  8. ^ (in Russian) Техника Чернобыля☢ Ж/Д транспорт☢
  9. ^ The Ovruch to Chernihiv Rail Link (Radioactive Railroad)
  10. ^ "Permanently Contaminated: The Railroad Graveyard" (Radioactive Railroad)
  11. ^ New Sarcophagus - Yanov Railway Station

External links

Media related to Yaniv railway station at Wikimedia Commons

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