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Centralia: From Disaster Town to Unintended Nature Reserve
28 Jan
Summary
- An underground coal fire ignited in 1962, forcing residents to abandon Centralia.
- Nature is reclaiming the abandoned Pennsylvania town, creating an unintended reserve.
- The town remains unsafe for redevelopment due to the persistent underground fire.

For over six decades, Centralia, Pennsylvania, has been dominated by an unextinguished underground coal fire. Ignited in 1962 by a trash fire that spread to subterranean coal seams, the blaze has rendered the town largely uninhabitable. Toxic gases, rising ground temperatures, and unpredictable sinkholes led to state and federal buyouts for residents.
By the early 1990s, Centralia was condemned, and most buildings were demolished, leaving behind a ghost town. Now, in the absence of human pressure, nature has begun a remarkable resurgence. Former residential areas are transforming into fields and woodlands, with vegetation slowly obscuring the old street grid.
This quiet landscape has become a haven for plant and animal life, developing into an unintended nature reserve. Insects, birds, and small mammals have moved in, attracted by the new habitat. Despite this ecological recovery, the underground fire continues to burn, making Centralia unsafe for any future redevelopment.
Centralia's story now includes not just industrial disaster but also the surprising resilience of nature. While the town has not been saved and the fire persists, life has found a way to return to this once-devastated landscape, offering a quiet testament to nature's power.




