Greenland

Søndre Strømfjord Abandoned DEW Line Station Circuit

Cold War radar stations across Arctic tundra.

Difficult

The Søndre Strømfjord DEW Line circuit connects the ghostly remains of three Cold War radar installations that once formed Greenland’s contribution to North America’s nuclear early warning network. Built in the 1950s during the height of Cold War paranoia, these stations perch on ridgelines chosen for maximum radar coverage toward the Soviet Union. Concrete bunkers, twisted antenna arrays, and abandoned vehicle graveyards mark each site, connected by deteriorating military access roads that switchback across rolling tundra between elevations of 800 to 2,100 feet.

This difficult route requires serious 4WD capability and rock sliders — the military roads have degraded into boulder fields in places where permafrost has shifted foundations. Plan for two days minimum with full camping gear and emergency supplies including satellite communication. The best access window runs July through early September when snow doesn’t block the higher elevation approaches. What you discover is a haunting Cold War archaeology lesson scattered across one of the planet’s most remote landscapes, where rusted infrastructure tells the story of when Greenland was America’s northern frontier.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features, ,
Length (miles)52 mi / 83.7 km
Duration2-3 days
Max elevation (ft)2100 ft
Best seasonJuly-September
Minimum vehicleModified 4WD with rock protection
Nearest townKangerlussuaq, Greenland
Land managerGovernment of Greenland
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsYes
Dispersed campingYes
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End coordinates
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