Torpedownia: The WWII German Torpedo Launch Station Off the Polish Coast

Photo by Michal Fludra / NurPhoto / Getty Images.

An abandoned piece of German construction still stands today off the coast of Poland, near the town of Gdynia. The structure, which sits on the shallow sea bed, was used by the Germans for testing torpedoes during World War II. Although it is now slowly collapsing, the complex remains a popular destination among beachgoers and urban explorers.

Torpedownia

Gdynia, Poland 24th, June 2015,  Torpedownia (Photo Credits: Michal Fludra / NurPhoto / Getty Images)

The testing center was erected 300-400 meters off the coast near the Polish city of Gdynia by the Germans in 1942 when the location was under German control. In 1939 the Führer visited the city of Gdynia and declared its name unacceptable because of its Slavic origins. As a result, it was renamed Gotenhafen.

In 1940, the Germans began the construction of a torpedo testing facility in Puck Bay. Two main platforms would eventually be built, with Torpedownia being the most well-known.

A second platform is built called Formoza

It was known as Torpedowaffenplatz Hexengrund to the Germans at the time, but it was later named Torpedownia by the Polish. About 3 miles away sits the second platform that was part of the same torpedo testing facility, called Formoza. The two platforms operated separately but were connected via a train line on the coast.

Torpedownia – German building and torpedoes research center, built on Polish territory during the Second World War. (Photo credits: Michal Fludra / NurPhoto / Getty Images).

The research facilities were in operation until 1945 and were used by the German Kriegsmarine and Luftwaffe. Formoza was primarily used by the Kriegsmarine, while Torpedownia was used by the Luftwaffe, beginning operations in 1942.

Torpedoes were aimed towards the Hel Peninsula that darted out into the Baltic Sea. After they were fired, they would be collected by vessels in Puck Bay and returned to the platforms to be examined.

The area fell under Soviet control

The facilities were crucial to the German development of torpedoes, as they had previously relied heavily on imported designs.

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Torpedownia featured engineering and assembly rooms, an observation tower, and torpedo launch shafts. During the war, a pier extended from the coast to the platform to enable access.

Torpedowania. (Photo Credits: Michal Fludra / NurPhoto / Getty Images).

With the Red Army rapidly approaching, German forces evacuated the area in March and April of 1945, which subsequently fell under Soviet control.

Post-war use

Torpedownia was a torpedo assembly hall with devices for test shooting, built at the bottom of the basin, just a few hundred meters from the shore. (Photo Credits: Michal Fludra / NurPhoto / Getty Images).

After the war, Soviet forces dismantled the equipment within the research facilities and transported it back to the USSR, where it was likely never used again. Shortly after, Soviets blasted away the section of the pier connected to Torpedownia, to deny access to unwanted visitors. The rest of the pier was demolished in the 1990s, the foundations of which can still be seen today.

Formoza continued to be used for the next several decades by the Soviet military for research and training divers.

The Polish military still uses the facility

In more recent years, the Polish military used the location as a base for training their elite special forces divers, who are called the Formoza, after the facility. It is still in use with the military.

Photo Credits: Michal Fludra / NurPhoto / Getty Images

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Today, the abandoned and dilapidated Torpedownia remains an intriguing site just a few hundred meters from the nearby beach. While it is unguarded and easily accessible, the structure is in a poor state, and is at risk of collapsing.

Jesse Beckett: Jesse is a U.K.-based writer for Tank Roar, passionate about military history and storytelling through digital content. With a special focus on tanks and ships, Jesse brings a deep enthusiasm for historical narratives to every piece.
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