The world is full of secret and exclusive places that we either don’t know about, or simply couldn’t visit if we wanted to. This list takes a look at ten of the most significant places around the world that are closed to the general public or are virtually impossible for the general public to visit.
Mezhgorye is a closed town in Russia which is believed to house people working on the highly secret Mount Yamantaw. The town was founded in 1979. Mount Yamantaw stands at 1,640 metres (5,381 ft) and is the highest mountain in the southern Urals. Along with Kosvinsky Mountain (600 km to the north), it is suspected by the United States of being a large secret nuclear facility and/or bunker. Large excavation projects have been observed by U.S. satellite imagery as recently as the late 1990s, during the time of Boris Yeltsin’s pro-Western government after the fall of the Soviet Union. Two garrisons, Beloretsk-15 and Beloretsk-16, were built on top of the facility. Repeated U.S. questions have yielded several different responses from the Russian government regarding Mount Yamantaw. They have said it is a mining site, a repository for Russian treasures, a food storage area, and a bunker for leaders in case of nuclear war.
This has been mentioned on a previous list – the archives are not secret despite their names. You can view any document you wish. But you cannot enter the archive. You must submit your request for a document and it will be supplied to you. Despite the foolishness of the recent junk from Ron Howard and Dan Brown (Angels and Demons) the documents are all available and there are no copies of suppressed scientific theories or great works that were banned. The only documents you can’t access are those which are not yet 75 years old (in order to protect diplomatic and governmental information). Indexes are available for people who want to see if a document exists in the archives. The Vatican Secret Archives have been estimated to contain 52 miles (84 km) of shelving, and there are 35,000 volumes in the selective catalogue alone.
Contrary to popular belief, Disneyland has a full liquor license which is used when the place closes down to the general public to accommodate private parties. But there is one place in Disneyland that is always open to sell booze: Club 33. Club 33 is a private club located in the heart of the New Orleans Square section of Disneyland. Officially maintained as a secret feature of the theme park, the entrance of the club is located next to the Blue Bayou Restaurant at “33 Royal Street” with the entrance recognizable by an ornate address plate with the number 33 engraved on it. Fees for joining range from 10 – 30 thousand US dollars and membership comes with a car park. If you want to join the club, you have to go to the end of the fourteen year waiting list.
Metro-2 in Moscow, Russia is a purported secret underground metro system which parallels the public Moscow Metro. The system was built supposedly during (or from) the time of Stalin and codenamed D-6 by the KGB. Russian journalists have reported that the existence of Metro-2 is neither confirmed nor denied by the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation (FSB) or the Moscow Metro administration. The length of Metro-2 is rumored to exceed even that of the “civil” (i.e. public) Metro. (It is said to have 4 lines and lie 50 to 200 m deep. It is said to connect the Kremlin with the FSB headquarters, the government airport at Vnukovo-2, and an underground town at Ramenki, in addition to other locations of national importance. Needless to say, the fact that no one confirms its existence makes it pretty difficult to visit.
White’s is the most exclusive English gentlemen’s club. It was founded in 1693 by Italian Francesco Bianco (Francis White) to sell the newly discovered hot chocolate but eventually became a typical (but extremely private) gentlemen’s club. The club is famous for its “betting book” in which members make bizarre gambles. The most famous of which is a 3,000 pound bet on which of two raindrops would slide down the window first. So why is this club on the list? Women are excluded completely from membership, so that is half our audience out. Secondly, men who want to join this exclusive club can only do so if invited by a sitting member who has the support of two other members. Unless you are a member of royalty, or are extremely powerful in politics or the arts, you are unlikely to ever see the exclusive White’s invitation.
I have put this so high on the list because it is the one place most readers are likely to expect to see. Area 51 is a nickname for a military base that is located in the southern portion of Nevada in the western United States, 83 miles (133 km) north-northwest of downtown Las Vegas. Situated at its center, on the southern shore of Groom Lake, is a large secretive military airfield. The base’s primary purpose is to support development and testing of experimental aircraft and weapons systems. The intense secrecy surrounding the base, the very existence of which the U.S. government barely acknowledges, has made it the frequent subject of conspiracy theories and a central component to unidentified flying object (UFO) folklore. The sign above states that deadly force can be used if people enter the Area 51 zone.
Room 39 or Bureau 39 is arguably one of the most secretive organizations in North Korea that seeks ways to obtain foreign currency for Kim Jong-il, North Korea’s Chairman of the National Defense Commission. Room 39 was established in the late 1970s. It has been described as the lynchpin of the North’s so-called “court economy” centered on the dynastic Kim family. It is unknown how the name originated. Very little is known about Room 39 due to the secretive nature surrounding the organization, but it is widely speculated that the organization uses 10 to 20 bank accounts in China and Switzerland for the purposes of counterfeiting, money laundering, and other illicit transactions. It is also alleged that Room 39 is involved in drug smuggling and illicit weapon sales. It is known, however, that the organization has 120 foreign trade companies under its jurisdiction and is under the direct control of Kim Jong-il. North Korea has denied taking part in any illegal activities. Room 39 is believed to be located inside a ruling Workers’ Party building in Pyongyang, the capital city of North Korea.
The Ise Grand Shrine in Japan (which is actually a series of over 100 shrines) is the most sacred shrine in Japan. It is dedicated to Amaterasu (the Sun goddess) and has been in existence since 4BC. The main shrine is alleged to hold the most important item in Japan’s imperial history: the Naikū (the mirror from Japanese mythology which eventually ended up in the hands of the first emperors). The shrine is demolished and rebuilt every 20 years in keeping with the Shinto idea of death and rebirth (the next rebuilding will be in 2013). This ranks very high on the list of places you will never go because the only person who can enter is the priest or priestess and he must be a member of the Japanese imperial family. So unless we have a Japanese prince or princess reading the site, no one here will ever see anything more than the thatched roof of the Ise Grand Shrine.
This is a place that is not only closed to the public, but it is a place that the public hope to never have to enter! In most “end of the world” films we see these days, there is always a highly classified area where US government officials and a chosen few get to go in the hopes that they can escape the impending doom. The Mount Weather Emergency Operations Center is the real thing. It was set up in the 1950s due to the cold war but continues to operate today. It is a “last hope” area. For obvious reasons its operations are highly classified. It is run by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The center is already functioning and even in small local disasters in the US, much of the telecommunications traffic is routed through it.
RAF Menwith Hill is a British military base with connections to the global ECHELON spy network. The site contains an extensive satellite ground station and is a communications intercept and missile warning site and has been described as the largest electronic monitoring station in the world. The site acts as a ground station for a number of satellites operated by the US National Reconnaissance Office, on behalf of the US National Security Agency, with antennae contained in a large number of highly distinctive white radomes, and is alleged to be an element of the ECHELON system. ECHELON was reportedly created to monitor the military and diplomatic communications of the Soviet Union and its Eastern Bloc allies during the Cold War in the early 1960s, but since the end of the Cold War it is believed to search also for hints of terrorist plots, drug dealers’ plans, and political and diplomatic intelligence. It has also been involved in reports of commercial espionage and is believed to filter all telephone and radio communications in the nations which host it – an extreme violation of privacy.






















@FlameHorse (119): Alright man, I’m keeping an eye out for the next one
Oe JFrater: First of all great list! I will try to trespass at least of these, and give you the update (that is,if I don’t get shot or sliced up)
Anyway, I wanted to ask you if you can make the list more smartphone fiendly, I travel a lot on train and read the lists on a daily basis, but the pages take forever to load I think is due pop ups. is thee a way tom make that better?
Thanks!
Guille
You forgot the REAL #1: The Women’s Bathroom!
How do you find all of this stuff? I’m a pretty good researcher, but I am quite convinced, that if I tried to come up with a list of this ilk, I would be working on it for the next 10 months (one month for each place.)
Neat list.
Re the Vatican archives: I love how people go so crazy over Dan Brown’s conspiracy stuff he uses in his stories; that is, people actually believe them. It’s fiction. Hello!
I don’t think I’d let anyone in either. There are extremely fragile and valuable documents in there and they don’t take well to being shuffled about. There are procedures for handling them. It’s not your local library.
awesome list
so true #124 so true
great list JFrater, good to have you back
SEMPER FIDELIS
i love this blogg the disney one is my favorite who whould ever spend 10,00 dollars to join a club i hardly have money to eat and ima spend it on this club nooo thanks
@Patriot (129): ha xD umm not really because if we are talking in general OBVIOUSLY women can go there! lol
Mr. McGregor’s Garden?
not true about club 33. i ate dinner up there and had wine with my girlfriend at the time. i worked at a bank and the ceo gave all the employees an invitation we could use any time for dinner and drinks. i remember sitting near a window and was able to look down and watch people walking around the park.
My dad worked in Menwith Hill back in the early 80s. Also at NSA for quite a while.
thank god, it seems we’re getting awesome lists again
You forgot about the monastery outside of the City of Jerusalem which holds the artifacts of the Holy Temple.
@ Item No 6: White(‘)s (only) Gentleman’s Club?
or White[..] Gentleman(s) (only Club?
Im glad is not in the U.S
Great list. Would have thrown Bohemian Grove in as well. Oddly a bit of nature that is invite only.
Can people please stop leaving the stupid comment of “nice list” or its variations. Please add something useful to the discussion. Thanks
@ YumYum Nice comment
Awesome list.
Last time I was at Disneyland I was looking around for the “secret” entrance because I’d heard there was one in New Orleans Square. Now I see it’s no secret, it’s a door right there with a number and everything! Go figure.
cool…
Number 10 or 7 should be number one, I’d be surprised if anyone here has been to either of them…
@ yumyum, I loved the eloquence in which the list was written. The general meter agrees with me. I found that the photos help illustrate the words as I no longer have an imagination due to years of excessive partying. I find that any affirmation to the work put into a list is positive and be it that it may not be constructive, it still is nice to be told by one’s readers that they appreciate the work.
@cyph3rlunch (25): There is a physicist named Bob Lazar who claims to have worked on alien spacecraft in order to figure out their technology. Here’s the youtube video, it’s fascinating:
Club 33 isn’t that hard to get into. Just know someone that works at Disney. Had my 16th birthday there… gratis.
i always wanted to get into area 51, SOOO bad!
@yumyum
i don’t get how saying ‘nice list’ is a stupid comment…..
I’ve been in Club 33 twice, and from what I was told about it, Disney needed money to open his park. Well he got 33 investors, so he opened a club dubbed Club 33. My brother worked as a high level executive for one of these early investors, and was able to make reservations for me. You get free entrance to the park with reservations, of course it’s $60.00 per person to eat there. That was 9 years ago when I was there. things may have changed since then, but I got no super great parking spot. I had to waddle thru like everybody else.
i’ve been to club 33 in disneyland TWICE!!
#10 – US Government should just stfu and mind their own business. They nuked two major cities killing hundreds of thousands of innocent people – they themselves are the ones who they should be concerned about, being a proven unstable, unreliable, negligent organisation.
What an interesting read! Thanks for this list. It was very insightful. I always wondered if Club 33 existed at Disneyland. I had no idea that there was a 14 year waiting list and the cost is so high!!!
@Anonymous (150): What the hell are you talking about?
theres the main oil line that starts in greensboro nc, there are huge tanks full of oil that takes oil up and down the east coast of the US, there are white rocks that surround those tanks that get presure washed everyday, so at nite if there is a outline on them, armed gaurds can shoot someone dead on sight. its was listed at one of the top ten targets for attackes on sept 11. but its really hard to get cearence to check the place out if you wanted to…….just a fun fact, great list
oh and that club at disneyland sounds awesome
I’m surprised Chernobyl isn’t on this list, but I guess it’s a given.
club 33 is awesome its very victorian-era themed …even the bathrooms! the times i’ve been there the food was AMAZING HUGE chocolate fountain…. best chocolate i’ve ever had with a lobster/crab/fillet mingion/ type of buffet plus you get free tickets to the park itself!
What about places that are simply inaccessible? I think there should be a sequel to this list. Places like the middle of the Amazon, the bottom of the deepest parts of the ocean and places that are just impossible for people to get to due to remoteness or danger. Maybe I’ll write one and submit it when I get the chance.
What about the supposed location of Mount Sinai? I heard about it from a documentary and even though the rest of it wasnt very credible about the ten plagues the location they theorized as the actual Mount Sinai seemed very believable. The area is off-limits because it’s (Saudia Arabian?) military land.
Great list Jamie! Your lists are like a whiff of fresh air
Aren’t there caves in Pennsylvania or someplace like that that houses confidential documents for all sorts of corporations? I think it also may have old docs from the US patent office. I remember seeing a documentary about them and I’m pretty sure that they’re sealed off to the public and only employees of the company who owns the cave and provides the archiving services has access. I tried googling it but no luck.
hey jr farter can i make a list about the terminator
@trfan (155): Actually, it is possible to go to Chernobyl, although it rarely happens. Most people end up in Prypiat, the nearby city (Call of Duty 4 enthusiasts will know about), and the nuclear reaction that caused the meltdown is encased in a solid concrete box known as the Sarcophagus. But a good portion of the radiation, both in Chernobyl itself and in the surrounding exclusion zone, has faded away enough to allow people to enter it. However, some areas remain unsafe, and should the Sarcophagus fail (which is likely, because it was built hastily and a good portion of it is stabilized by the damaged reactor walls), the whole disaster could essentially recur, making the area radioactive once again. But according to Wikipedia, a new much more sound structure is going to be completed by 2011 which will encase both the reactor and the Sarcophagus.
good list!
i got psn account and i play good at killzone 2 and modern warfare 2.IANZ 09 do u have ps3….
@LIM (164): I do not, I’m an Xbox 360 man myself
what game do u have??????i got resident evil 5,metal gear solid 4,little big planet,burnout paradise and call of duty…x box 360 always spoil and come out red colour light,and that thing feel so stupid dude.why u dont buy ps 3?????????
Wow a decent list at last, prolly something to do with JFraters return.
@137/Incitatus
It’s called White’s, because the guy who made it had the last-name ‘White’.
This is a great list
Nice list. Mysterious….
amazing and very interesting list.happy new year JF
nice lisy for cisco.
wow , i learned alot
this is my favorite list so far
great list
great list.
notable ommission would be the Kabba in Mecca. The little black box which you’d probably seen on tv. It is the direction to which 2 billion muslims face in prayer yet very few are allowed to enter.
I am surprised that the tomb of Qin Shi Huang wasn’t included, as that would count as one of the oldest places on this list.
One cannot enter it because it is said to house flowing rivers of pure mercury, something thought impossible.
This list got me thinking about places I knew (as in ones that are near to me) but couldn’t enter. My old university (UCD in Dublin) has loads of tunnels beneath it. The campus was built around the time of the student riots in France in the 1960s. They were afraid that type of behaviour might spread to Ireland so they made the college ‘riot proof’. One of the things they did to do so was build tunnels connecting the main buildings so that the lecturers etc could escape in case of rioting students. I’m not sure how many they built and if the whole thing is still open. The entrance to one of them was in the arts building and you could go down a little way before meeting a locked door.
Any fellas who are still wanting to get into the ladies toilets may want to try Fibbers on Parnell Street. There are always guys in there!
@Eradicate (168):
I’ve been to Menwith Hill many times – it’s just a military base that has radar.
Jeez…
I am sure the list can be extended! Would be neat to read of other places “normal” folks don’t have access to. Hadn’t even heard of #2 yet, and I AM in the US!
Or places to visit for your bucket list.
Great blog entry – I’ll never look
Club 33 isn’t that hard to get into, if you know the right people. Some businesses (such as banks) have accounts with Club 33, and reservations can be set up through the designated account holder (usually someone in HR). I’ve been there twice. it’s all right.