Yaniv railway station

Yaniv
Yanov

Location Yaniv (south of Pripyat)
 Ukraine
Coordinates UA 51°23′39″N 30°03′23″E / 51.3942°N 30.0564°E / 51.3942; 30.0564Coordinates: UA 51°23′39″N 30°03′23″E / 51.3942°N 30.0564°E / 51.3942; 30.0564
Line(s) Chernihiv–Ovruch
Platforms 2
Tracks 4
Other information
Station code 347103
History
Opened 1925
Closed 27 april 1986 (emergency)

Yaniv railway station[1][2] (Ukrainian: Янів, Russian: Янов), also named Yanov station,[3][4] is an abandoned Ukrainian train 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.[4]

Before the 1986 accident at the Chernobyl 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.[5] Among the passenger traffic, it was also served by the long-distance express train Moscow-Khmelnytskyi.[6][7]

During 1986 there was a reconstruction of the railway section Chernihiv–Yaniv to provide service to the Chernobyl staff and contractors, and the section from Yaniv to Slavutych was electrified. At the moment, the network is not being used and partly dismantled at the station and on the stretch Yaniv–Semihody.[3]

Currently, one of the paths passing through the station was reconstructed and used for the construction work on the construction of the Shelter-2-a new sarcophagus for the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant.[8]

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.

References

Media related to Yaniv railway station at Wikimedia Commons

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