Igarka
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Igarka (Russian: Ига́рка ee-GAHR-kuh) is a city in the extreme north of the Krasnoyarsk Region, 163 kilometers north of the Arctic Circle.Understand
Igarka was founded in 1931. The city got its name from the channel on which it was located, which was in turn named after a local fisherman, Yegor Shiryaev.
Igarka is infamous as the starting point for Stalin's railway to nowhere, constructed between 1949 and Stalin's death in 1953. The project failed and thousands of the gulag laborers died in the process.
It is the main port via which the timber harvested in the Yenisei River basin is shipped to Europe.
It has a population of approximately 6,000 people and has been in decline.
Igarka is infamous as the starting point for Stalin's railway to nowhere, constructed between 1949 and Stalin's death in 1953. The project failed and thousands of the gulag laborers died in the process.
It is the main port via which the timber harvested in the Yenisei River basin is shipped to Europe.
It has a population of approximately 6,000 people and has been in decline.
Get in
By plane
Igarka Airporthas flights to/from Krasnoyarsk, Novosibirsk, Svetlogorsk, and Norilsk. Charter flights are available to remote parts of Taymyria and Evenkia.
By boat
PassengerRechTrans operates boats in the summer on the Yenisey River to/from Krasnoyarsk. The journey takes 3 days.See
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address: St. Bolshoi Theatre 15This museum shows geological features and is mostly 7-14 meters underground.