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posted by Fnord666 on Sunday August 02 2020, @11:42PM   Printer-friendly
from the does-anyone-have-to-go-outside-to-clean-the-sensors? dept.

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2020/aug/01/3m-price-tag-inside-luxury-doomsday-bunker

Afraid of nuclear war, natural disasters, economic meltdown? The Survival Condo could be the answer

"Mechanical level", "medical level", "store level" the voice announces as the lift descends into the earth. I'd entered at parking lot level, the building's apex. I am travelling through an inverted skyscraper, the floor numbers ascending – third, fourth – as we plumb the building's depths. A hulking man in his late 50s called Larry Hall stands next to me, whistling, black shirt tucked into blue jeans.

When the doors open, I can't suppress a laugh. In front of us, four storeys below central Kansas, is a supermarket complete with shopping baskets, cold cabinets and an espresso machine behind the counter. Hall smiles.

"It's good, isn't it? On the original blueprint for the renovation, it just said 'storerooms' on this level. The psychologist we hired for the project took one look at that and said, 'No, no, no, this needs to feel like a miniature Whole Foods supermarket. We need a tile floor and nicely presented cases, because if people are locked in this silo and they have to come down here and rifle through cardboard boxes to get their food, you'll have depressed people everywhere.'"

I am inside the most lavish and sophisticated private bunker in the world: the Survival Condo. It was once a cold war US government missile silo. Constructed in the early 60s, at a cost of approximately $15m to the US taxpayer, it was one of 72 structures built to protect [against] a nuclear warhead 100 times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Nagasaki. Many of these silos were blown up and buried after decades of disuse. But not all of them.


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday August 03 2020, @10:21PM (2 children)

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday August 03 2020, @10:21PM (#1030959) Journal

    that by virtue of being in the sticks, they are somehow disconnected from all the dependencies of urbanites.

    Which is more a fact than a myth. The isolation forces a substantial degree of independence.

    The reality is most people who consider themselves "rural" are every bit as doomed. They're nearly all living suburban consumer lifestyles, the only real difference being they have septic systems instead of proper sewers.

    In other words, they are "urban" but with more real estate and a sewer system that won't go down when the collapse/war/whatever happens.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 03 2020, @11:53PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 03 2020, @11:53PM (#1031005)

    In other words, they're still highly dependent on the supply chain for very nearly absolutely everything.

    There are of course exceptions and we are all so very impressed with those odd rugged individualists, but the vast, vast majority of people wouldn't survive very long after the stores have been raided and their gas tank runs dry.

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday August 04 2020, @01:36AM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday August 04 2020, @01:36AM (#1031061) Journal

      In other words, they're still highly dependent on the supply chain for very nearly absolutely everything.

      Where "everything" is much smaller than it is for a urban population. The elephant in the room is food. Anything else can be worked around or just suffered through. No matter how you work it, urban populations are too dense to feed themselves, even if somehow the entire urban region was converted to food growing. And that's ignoring that urban areas make tempting targets for nuclear warfare.