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Sanatorium Iveria Tskaltubo

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THE ABANDONED SANATORIUM IN GEORGIA


They started building ‘Sanatorium Iveria’ in 1952. Works finished almost ten years later. This Stalinist architecture sanatorium in Tskaltubo was sold to a Russian investor in 2017.

When Georgia was part of the Soviet Union, the state guaranteed its workers the right to rest. As a result more than 180 health spas where built, where the working class could re-energize on a two-week, state-sponsored vacations.

Tskaltubo was one of those spa resorts on the so-called Russian Riviera. Eventually construction on its 22 sanatoriums began in the 1920s, and by the 1980s, trains drove in daily from Moscow. Each year, hundreds of thousands of people bathed in its radon-carbonate springs that in essence could cure anything from eczema to infertility.

The ‘Iveria’ sanatorium was built between 1952 and 1962 and was designed by M.M Buz-Ogli. The sanatorium was built in the center of the city with a capacity of 300 beds.

According to an online Georgian news site, the sanatorium was sold in 2017 for a little over 100 thousand US dollars. In fact there are plans to re-open the Iveria as a hotel as some point in the future. Although the sale specified that the investor should fund the construction of a 160-room hotel on the site, producing jobs for 80 people. I visited the ‘Sanatorium Iveria’ in 2019.

Other Tskaltubo reports:
Bath house No. 5
Hotel Medea

Built 1952
Abandoned 1992
Reconverted 2020

The post Sanatorium Iveria Tskaltubo appeared first on Abandoned and Lost Places.


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