• Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
What's On

Kate Middleton attends secret royal engagement after pulling out of Royal Ascot

26 June 2025

Pastor’s daughter, 3, dies in hot car after he forgot to drop her at nursery

26 June 2025

‘Super well made’ necklace so hard to break it’s got a lifetime warranty for under £50

26 June 2025

Amazon Fire Stick rival offers a new way to stream live TV, Netflix and Disney+

26 June 2025

How to watch Juventus vs Man City for FREE with Club World Cup clash not on UK TV

26 June 2025

New curfew rules in Turkey holiday spot ‘will be the end’

26 June 2025

David Beckham refuses to give into Brooklyn feud as he pens gushing post to mum Sandra

26 June 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Kate Middleton attends secret royal engagement after pulling out of Royal Ascot
  • Pastor’s daughter, 3, dies in hot car after he forgot to drop her at nursery
  • ‘Super well made’ necklace so hard to break it’s got a lifetime warranty for under £50
  • Amazon Fire Stick rival offers a new way to stream live TV, Netflix and Disney+
  • How to watch Juventus vs Man City for FREE with Club World Cup clash not on UK TV
  • New curfew rules in Turkey holiday spot ‘will be the end’
  • David Beckham refuses to give into Brooklyn feud as he pens gushing post to mum Sandra
  • Exact amount Brits draw the line at with splitting the bill on meals out
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
England TimesEngland Times
Demo
  • Home
  • News
  • World
  • Politics
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Tech
    • Web Stories
    • Spotlight
    • Press Release
England TimesEngland Times
Home » ‘Abandoned hotels are attracting dark tourists like me – I was petrified by what I discovered’
Travel

‘Abandoned hotels are attracting dark tourists like me – I was petrified by what I discovered’

By staff26 June 2025No Comments4 Mins Read

My trip to Georgia took an unexpected turn after I participated in the emerging dark tourism trend – only to discover I had actually invaded someone else’s living space

Tskaltubo is the former bathhouse of the Soviets.
Tskaltubo is the former bathhouse of the Soviets.

What’s the worst thing you’ve ever done on holiday? Once I broke into someone else’s home. It was September 2024 and my boyfriend and I were chasing the tail of an adventure.

It was one we thought we might find in Georgia, a nation in the Caucasus with a tremulous Russian border. A series of gushing blog posts pointed us to the country’s most compelling dark tourist hotspot: Tskaltubo, former bathhouse of the Soviets.

If you’ve never heard the term before, dark tourism has been an emerging niche among thrill-seekers for several years now. Defined by darktourism.com as tourism that involves travelling to sites that include death and disaster, it’s been widely expanded to include locations linked with dictators, serial killers and incarceration.

Tskaltubo
Tskaltubo resort is a well-known dark tourist hotspot(Image: Roman Robroek / SWNS.com)

READ MORE: Millions of Brits are forgoing travel insurance but my holiday nightmare shows you need it

And it’s only growing in popularity. According to research published by the Digital Journal, the industry is projected to reach over £32 billion in value by 2031, while a 2022 Travel News survey found that an overwhelming 91% of Gen Z (13-28 year olds) had engaged in the activity in some form.

Tskaltubo, a spa town where the late Joseph Stalin and his comrades used to kick back and unwind, certainly fit the bill of morbid allure. Besides, the photos made it look like something straight out of the Last of Us.

It’s been abandoned since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and what remains are half-crumbled buildings, floating stairs, and premonitions of societal collapse. It looks like another world entirely.

We took a bus to Tskaltubo, a dusty town that appeared half-empty, and in my search for a creepy building to explore, I saw the hotel. It was several stories tall. Grass poked through the steps on the walk up to it. There felt like there was something drawing me in.

Tskatlubo
Tskaltubo used to be a Soviet resort town(Image: Roman Robroek / SWNS.com)

There is something particularly unsettling about an abandoned hotel. Corridors upon corridors of rooms lay empty. Furnishings were torn crudely from walls, leaving chunks of scrabbled plaster.

Damp spread through the white ceilings like bleeding tendrils. And yet signs of life were there. I saw a half-open Bible by the window sill. Old documents thrashed over the floors. A half-drunk coffee mug by a boarded-up door.

I climbed up the half-dilapidated staircase to the topmost floor. There, I could sense an unnatural stillness. Stretched along the hallway was a string laid out like a tripwire. I stepped over it, heart racing.

I sensed some kind of presence but I told myself I was making it up. Then I came across a room with a doll tied to it. Room 125. I stopped and stared at the doll. Its eyes were red and they were boring into me. A door slammed. I screamed and I ran.

I found out later that it was not my imagination. Tskaltubo is in fact home to tens, perhaps hundreds of IDPs. IDPs are internally displaced persons and there are over 280,000 in Georgia, based on a UN report.

Doll tied to door
The doll was tied to the door of an empty room

Help us improve our content by completing the survey below. We’d love to hear from you!

The majority of them fled the region of Abkhazia in the 1990s on the back of the Georgia-Abkhaz war. With few alternatives, many chose to settle in Tskaltubo, where they lived in abandoned bathhouses and hotels on the verge of collapse.

In 2022, 12 of the sanatoriums were sold to investors, while the Georgian government has created a housing scheme to rehome refugees. But, according to a BBC report, as of 2024 inhabitants say many families are still living there.

I thought about my pounding footsteps, the shrieking. The ominous boobie traps left, not by a ghost, or a horror villain, but by people with no other home – I assumed to ward people like me off. But I’m just part of a wider problem.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email

Related News

New curfew rules in Turkey holiday spot ‘will be the end’

26 June 2025

‘I’m a Brit living in Benidorm and these activities are a waste of money’

26 June 2025

‘We booked a luxury £12k Jamaica holiday with TUI – it was so filthy we wanted to go home by day three’

26 June 2025

UK’s ‘saddest’ abandoned shopping centre shuts graffitied doors with empty streets and dead rat

26 June 2025

‘I went on holiday to Iran weeks before war – it was nothing like I expected’

26 June 2025

Major ‘two bag’ hand luggage rule change takes step forward – what it means for Brits

26 June 2025
Latest News

Pastor’s daughter, 3, dies in hot car after he forgot to drop her at nursery

26 June 2025

‘Super well made’ necklace so hard to break it’s got a lifetime warranty for under £50

26 June 2025

Amazon Fire Stick rival offers a new way to stream live TV, Netflix and Disney+

26 June 2025

How to watch Juventus vs Man City for FREE with Club World Cup clash not on UK TV

26 June 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Travel

New curfew rules in Turkey holiday spot ‘will be the end’

By staff26 June 20250

Rebecca Kitchener, 38, goes on holiday to Marmaris every year – but reckons this year…

David Beckham refuses to give into Brooklyn feud as he pens gushing post to mum Sandra

26 June 2025

Exact amount Brits draw the line at with splitting the bill on meals out

26 June 2025

Robert Maudsley’s nephew makes startling realisation after visiting serial killer in prison

26 June 2025
England Times
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2025 England Times. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version