Just about anywhere you go in Nevada, there’s an abandoned town worth exploring — businesses, homes, shells of old cars. While most of these aging relics are captivating reminders of Nevada’s earliest years, one abandoned town in Nevada is beyond incredibly eerie.

Nicknamed the “Survival Town,” no one ever lived there. It’s comprised of houses once populated by mannequins and stocked with packaged goods. This staged town was the target of a nuclear test in 1955. Code-named Apple II, the test was part of Operation Teapot and took place at Yucca Flats on the Nevada Proving Grounds (now the Nevada National Security Site).

Two Years Earlier: Operation Doorstep, 1953

Wikipedia / United States Department of Energy The scene above is not the aftermath of a really crazy dinner party. It’s from a 1953 nuclear test, prior to Apple II. This house survived the nuclear blast. The female mannequin … well, that’s another story.There were around 100 above-ground nuclear tests at the Nevada test site between 1951 and 1963. Communities downwind from the radioactive fallout in Utah, Nevada, and Southern Arizona were repeatedly told there was no danger. Spectators in downtown Las Vegas often sat on their rooftops and watched the mushroom clouds rise to the sky. Talk about entertainment! Atomic pageants were a craze; the winner was crowned “Miss Atom Bomb.” Soon “downwinders” began developing high rates of leukemia and other cancers. In 1980, a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee found that all the evidence suggesting radiation was harmful had been disregarded and suppressed.Nuclear testing beneath the ground continued through 1992. That research is just about as alarming as the tests themselves. It was known for decades that radiation was harmful to the communities around the test sites and nothing was done about it.

Apple II Goes Boom!

Photo courtesy of National Nuclear Security Administration / Nevada Site Office The Apple II blast (above) took place on May 5, 1955. For this test, homes were built from different materials at various distances from ground zero. Two of the houses that survived the blast were identical, except for their proximity to the blast. One house was built 7,800 feet away. The second house was built 10,500 feet away.

Remains Of House At 7,800 Feet - Exterior

Wikimedia / National Nuclear Security Administration Nevada Site Office While this test provided some information about the impact of the bomb to structures, and possibly mannequins, it didn’t do anything about testing the long-term impact that these bombs would have both on the sites themselves and on the surrounding area. It turns out that the impact was more significant than could be realized through these trial runs.

In fact, research has shown that there is still active radiation in and around this site, more than 50 years later.

Flickr / Danny Bradbury The radiation is theoretically not too high because you can take a guided tour of the site and learn about the development of atomic weapons.

Here you can see a restricted area on the property.

Wikimedia / Bill Ebbesen While the history is fascinating, seeing this casual level of destruction, even on mannequins, is pretty unnerving.

Take in these images, because you can’t roam the property freely.

Flickr / Wayne Hsieh Today, the only way you can view the Apple II site in person is on a guided tour or you can view it on Google Maps.

Other Points Of Interest

Wikimedia / Federal Government of the Unites States The Sedan Crater is another stop on the Nevada National Security Site tour. Created during an underground 1962 nuclear test, it can also be seen from the Earth’s orbit. Take the tour or hitch a ride on the Space Shuttle, your decision.Tours are arranged through The Nevada Office of Public Affairs. Tours depart from the Atomic Testing Museum at 755 E. Flamingo Road, in Las Vegas. The museum is an 8,000-square-foot treasure trove of artifacts and information about the nuclear age.

Wikipedia / United States Department of Energy

The scene above is not the aftermath of a really crazy dinner party. It’s from a 1953 nuclear test, prior to Apple II. This house survived the nuclear blast. The female mannequin … well, that’s another story.There were around 100 above-ground nuclear tests at the Nevada test site between 1951 and 1963. Communities downwind from the radioactive fallout in Utah, Nevada, and Southern Arizona were repeatedly told there was no danger. Spectators in downtown Las Vegas often sat on their rooftops and watched the mushroom clouds rise to the sky. Talk about entertainment! Atomic pageants were a craze; the winner was crowned “Miss Atom Bomb.” Soon “downwinders” began developing high rates of leukemia and other cancers. In 1980, a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee found that all the evidence suggesting radiation was harmful had been disregarded and suppressed.Nuclear testing beneath the ground continued through 1992. That research is just about as alarming as the tests themselves. It was known for decades that radiation was harmful to the communities around the test sites and nothing was done about it.

Photo courtesy of National Nuclear Security Administration / Nevada Site Office

The Apple II blast (above) took place on May 5, 1955. For this test, homes were built from different materials at various distances from ground zero. Two of the houses that survived the blast were identical, except for their proximity to the blast. One house was built 7,800 feet away. The second house was built 10,500 feet away.

Wikimedia / National Nuclear Security Administration Nevada Site Office

While this test provided some information about the impact of the bomb to structures, and possibly mannequins, it didn’t do anything about testing the long-term impact that these bombs would have both on the sites themselves and on the surrounding area. It turns out that the impact was more significant than could be realized through these trial runs.

Flickr / Danny Bradbury

The radiation is theoretically not too high because you can take a guided tour of the site and learn about the development of atomic weapons.

Wikimedia / Bill Ebbesen

While the history is fascinating, seeing this casual level of destruction, even on mannequins, is pretty unnerving.

Flickr / Wayne Hsieh

Today, the only way you can view the Apple II site in person is on a guided tour or you can view it on Google Maps.

Wikimedia / Federal Government of the Unites States

The Sedan Crater is another stop on the Nevada National Security Site tour. Created during an underground 1962 nuclear test, it can also be seen from the Earth’s orbit. Take the tour or hitch a ride on the Space Shuttle, your decision.Tours are arranged through The Nevada Office of Public Affairs. Tours depart from the Atomic Testing Museum at 755 E. Flamingo Road, in Las Vegas. The museum is an 8,000-square-foot treasure trove of artifacts and information about the nuclear age.

As you can see from the above video, not many houses made it through the blast. We took a closer look at two of the houses that survived and a tiny bit of history in the story above. While the history here is fascinating, and this is house new technologies develop, it’s a bit alarming to think of the impact this had and is having on surrounding towns.

Would you be interested in touring the incredibly eerie “Survival Town”? Or is this abandoned town too incredibly eerie? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

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Address: Yucca Flat, Nevada, USA

The OIYS Visitor Center

Abandoned Sites In Nevada February 09, 2023 CC What are other abandoned places in Nevada? After visiting the Survival Town (if you dare), check out these other abandoned sites in Nevada.

Rhyolite Ghost Town Bonnie Claire Ghost Town Gold Point Ghost Town Goldfield Ghost Town Echo Bay Hotel Abandoned Cities under Lake Mead Pine Grove Ghost Town

  What are haunted places in Nevada? If you’ve got the guts, consider checking out these haunted places in Nevada as well.

Mizpah Hotel – Tonopah Silver Queen Hotel - Virginia City Boulder Dam Hotel - Boulder City Goldfield Hotel – Goldfield Mackay Mansion - Virginia City Whiskey Pete’s Hotel & Casino - Jean

The OIYS Visitor Center

Abandoned Sites In Nevada

February 09, 2023

CC

What are other abandoned places in Nevada? After visiting the Survival Town (if you dare), check out these other abandoned sites in Nevada.

Rhyolite Ghost Town Bonnie Claire Ghost Town Gold Point Ghost Town Goldfield Ghost Town Echo Bay Hotel Abandoned Cities under Lake Mead Pine Grove Ghost Town

  What are haunted places in Nevada? If you’ve got the guts, consider checking out these haunted places in Nevada as well.

Mizpah Hotel – Tonopah Silver Queen Hotel - Virginia City Boulder Dam Hotel - Boulder City Goldfield Hotel – Goldfield Mackay Mansion - Virginia City Whiskey Pete’s Hotel & Casino - Jean

The OIYS Visitor Center

The OIYS Visitor Center

After visiting the Survival Town (if you dare), check out these other abandoned sites in Nevada.

  • Rhyolite Ghost Town
  • Bonnie Claire Ghost Town
  • Gold Point Ghost Town
  • Goldfield Ghost Town
  • Echo Bay Hotel
  • Abandoned Cities under Lake Mead
  • Pine Grove Ghost Town

 

What are haunted places in Nevada?

If you’ve got the guts, consider checking out these haunted places in Nevada as well.

  • Mizpah Hotel – Tonopah
  • Silver Queen Hotel - Virginia City
  • Boulder Dam Hotel - Boulder City
  • Goldfield Hotel – Goldfield
  • Mackay Mansion - Virginia City
  • Whiskey Pete’s Hotel & Casino - Jean