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Posts Tagged ‘Oil Patch’s Venice’

Neft Dashlari

Lars Herbst brought this interesting article to my attention – Rigs-to-Ruins? Rigs-to-Relics?

“In the 1950s, Soviet engineers built a massive city in the Caspian Sea off the coast of Azerbaijan. It was a network of oil platforms linked by hundreds of kilometers of roads and housing 5,000 workers, with a cinema, a park and apartment blocks. Gradually disintegrating but still closely guarded, this astonishing place inspired a fiery scene in a James Bond movie.

Neft Dashlari (Black Rock), as the town is known, is no doubt the most unique oil town in history – the oil patch’s Venice! 😉

In Neft Dashlari’s heyday, some 2,000 drilling platforms were spread in a 30-kilometer circle, joined by a network of bridge viaducts spanning 300 kilometers. Trucks thundered across the bridges and eight-story apartment blocks were built for the 5,000 workers who sometimes spent weeks on Neft Dashlari. The voyage back to the mainland could take anything between six and twelve hours, depending on the type of ship. The island had its own beverage factory, soccer pitch, library, bakery, laundry, 300-seat cinema, bathhouse, vegetable garden and even a tree-lined park for which the soil was brought from the mainland.

Decommissioning lesson: “Dismantling Neft Dashlari properly would probably be more expensive than simply keeping it going with a scaled-down oil production.Sound familiar?

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