Sergey Shestakov. Untitled. From the project ‘Journey into the Future. Stop #2’. 2011. C-print. Collection of Moscow House of Photography Museum
Sergey Shestakov. Untitled. From the project ‘Journey into the Future. Stop #2’. 2011. C-print. Collection of Moscow House of Photography Museum
Sergey Shestakov. Untitled. From the project ‘Journey into the Future. Stop #2’. 2011. C-print. Collection of Moscow House of Photography Museum
Sergey Shestakov. Untitled. From the project ‘Journey into the Future. Stop #2’. 2011. C-print. Collection of Moscow House of Photography Museum
Sergey Shestakov. Untitled. From the project ‘Journey into the Future. Stop #2’. 2011. C-print. Collection of Moscow House of Photography Museum
Sergey Shestakov. Untitled. From the project ‘Journey into the Future. Stop #2’. 2011. C-print. Collection of Moscow House of Photography Museum
Sergey Shestakov. Untitled. From the project ‘Journey into the Future. Stop #2’. 2011. C-print. Collection of Moscow House of Photography Museum
exhibition is over
1, Manege Square (
www.moscowmanege.ru
Two years ago I began a research project on what modern civilisation is leaving behind for future generations. My 2010 photographs of the town of Pripyat at Chernobyl suggested a name for the project — ‘Journey into the Future’. That was the title of one of the partially decayed children’s books left in a kindergarten after the horrific accident. Chernobyl was ‘Journey into the Future. Stop #1’.
Facility C, Anadyr-1 — military unit 75414 NMU (nuclear military unit).
Built in 1958 by order of Nikita Khrushchev as part of the USSR Northern Nuclear Defence project. This unit directed intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM) launches aimed at the USA. The facility located ten kilometres from the aerodrome included the military town Anadyr-1, an ICBM base and underground railway for transporting cargo. To comply with the signed agreement for SRBM and MRBM (short- and medium-range ballistic missiles) the USSR had to destroy all its SS-20s in 1991. The facility was deactivated between 1992 and 1998, and in 2002 the military abandoned it altogether. Residents of the military town were resettled in Engels and Saratov.