Adak is a remote Alaska island in the north Pacific Ocean. It was the site of a US Navy base with more than 6000 military and their families by the 1980s. But everyone left when the base closed in March 1997, and most houses and buildings became abandoned. Now, Adak Island has only 33 permanent residents. Let's take a rainy look at one of Adak's long-decaying subdivisions.
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A B O U T
Past the Present Future is a film series by globally recognized photographer Chris Luckhardt. The series views the PAST through a lens in the PRESENT with an eye to FUTURE development.
B I O G R A P H Y
Chris Luckhardt has documented and photographed some of the most iconic and viral images of abandoned places around the world. He was among the first photographers to publish photos in the press from legendary abandoned places like Hashima Island, Nara Dreamland, Michigan Central Station, and Six Flags New Orleans. His body of work has led to interviews and collaborations with The White House, Netflix, Ford, GQ China, ABC News, Good Morning America, Scholastic Canada, Yahoo Japan, and many more. In 2016, the Obama administration invited Chris to photograph a private citizen "haunted" tour of The White House.
M U S I C L I C E N S E D
Singularity, by Jonny Easton (via uppbeat.io/t/j...)
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Негізгі бет US Navy abandoned this remote Alaska base in 1997... What happened to Adak's houses?
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