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Nuclear Family Housing: Life In A Missile Silo
Home<http://feedproxy.google.com/%7Er/WebUrbanist/%7E3/g8lG9IvclIk/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email>

Posted: 25 Jul 2010 10:00 AM PDT
 [ By Steve <http://weburbanist.com/steve> in Abandoned
Places<http://weburbanist.com/category/abandonments/>,
Architecture & Design <http://weburbanist.com/category/architecture/>, History
& Factoids <http://weburbanist.com/category/history/>. ]


Formerly spark plugs of the cold war, dozens of decades-old, decommissioned
underground nuclear missile silos are slowly slipping into disrepair and
decay<http://weburbanist.com/2008/07/27/abandoned-buildings-property-and-other-places/2/>.
Not all of these relics are destined for the ash heap of history, however, a
precious few are taking on new life as post-apocalyptic family homes –
without the apocalypse. The best thing about living in a refurbished missile
silo? Telling your kids, *“You can’t fight in here, this is the war room!”*

Home, Home On The Firing Range

(images via: UP-HAA <http://www.uphaa.com/blog/index.php/tag/home-silo/>, Arms
Control 
Wonk<http://lewis.armscontrolwonk.com/archive/863/20th-century-castles>and
Pyjamas
Media<http://pajamasmedia.com/richardfernandez/2009/07/23/going-underground/>
)

Why would anyone want to live in an old missile
silo<http://gearcrave.com/2008-03-23/how-to-buy-your-own-missile-silo/>?
Let’s look at the positives, starting with the best construction work
government money can buy. Then there’s the feeling of security that comes
with living in a structure built to withstand tornadoes, hailstorms,
wildfires and the odd Soviet pre-emptive nuclear strike. Home handyman types
will find little to do besides changing light bulbs.
A Real Fixer-Upper?

(images via: Think Or
Thwim<http://thinkorthwim.com/2007/10/08/for-sale-by-owner-titan-missile-silo/>and
Artificial
Owl<http://www.artificialowl.net/2008/10/abandoned-us-anti-ballistic-missile.html>
)

There are negatives, of course, that go beyond the lack of skylights,
picture windows and kidney-shaped swimming pools. Though they were built to
last, missile 
silos<http://dornob.com/ultimate-underground-home-converted-nuclear-missile-silo/>and
their associated infrastructure did require maintenance of the
preventive variety. The oddly beautiful installation above is the Stanley R.
Mickelsen Safeguard
complex<http://www.artificialowl.net/2008/10/abandoned-us-anti-ballistic-missile.html>in
Nekoma, North Dakota: the only operational anti-ballistic missile
(ABM)
base ever completed and dating from the late 1960s. ABMs were designed to
protect ICBM sites from attack by enemy missiles, in other words protecting
our protectors.

(images via: English
Russia<http://englishrussia.com/index.php/2008/12/26/abandoned-missile-launch-site/>,
Getty 
Images<http://www.gettyimages.ca/detail/83401677/Photonica?language=en-US&location=CAN>and
Telstar
Logistics<http://telstarlogistics.typepad.com/telstarlogistics/2008/11/a-nike-missile-base-where-the-cold-war-never-ended.html>
)

A missile 
base<http://telstarlogistics.typepad.com/telstarlogistics/2008/11/a-nike-missile-base-where-the-cold-war-never-ended.html>that
was completely neglected for years may have a number of daunting
issues
any new owner must deal with before moving in such as flooding, mold and
structural settling. Got a sticky set of blast doors? That’ll require more
than just a few shots of WD40.
Blasts From The Past

(images via: Gypsy Journal <http://www.gypsyjournal.net/titan.htm> and
Wikimedia<http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Minuteman_II_in_silo_1980.jpg>
)

Most nuclear missile sites comprise much more than the actual missile silo.
Underground control complexes attached to the silo by tunnels provided
personnel with long-term living facilities (kitchens, bathrooms etc.) and
these are the portions most often chosen for home conversion. Even so, life
at an updated missile base isn’t a bowl of cherries – and there are usually
few stores or supermarkets nearby from which to procure said cherries.

(image via: Expedition
Portal<http://www.expeditionportal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=25705>
)

For obvious reasons, nuclear missile bases were located in places with
sparse population and negligible infrastructure. The image above shows an
old Titan -1 Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) launching base
located east of Denver, Colorado. Electrical power, gas & water, waste
disposal and the lack of friendly (or often ANY) neighbors are serious
considerations for anyone contemplating living in a renovated silo.
My Home Is My Subterra Castle

(images via: Jiaju
<http://jiaju.xooob.com/fgsj/200912/395945_1037633.html>and Trip
Advisor<http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g38671-d1010044-Reviews-Subterra_Castle-Dover_Kansas.html>
)

When luck is on their side, homeowners can acquire a decommissioned missile
silo in good repair at a decent price. Take the Subterra
Castle<http://www.subterracastle.com/index.html>in Dover, Kansas.
Edward and Dianna Peden originally purchased the former
Atlas E ICBM 
site<http://webecoist.com/2010/01/20/going-green-underground-16-subterranean-eco-buildings/3-subterra-underground-missile-silo-house/>for
around $40,000 back in the 1980s – presumably at the bottom of the
market.

(images via: Roadside America <http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/16730>and
Subterra <http://www.subterracastle.com/photos.htm>)

The Pedens proceeded to renovate & revamp the 34-acre site to the point that
organized tours now visit their home. With 6,500 sq ft of underground living
space, an 11,000 sq ft underground shop/garage, his & hers side-by-side
toilets and a hot tub, the Cold War is just a fading memory.

*Check out this video that introduces the Pedens and their
upcycled<http://weburbanist.com/upcycle>silo home:
*

Weird US Underground Missile Silo Home, via
WeirdUSTV<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0_liNYkZn_M>
Cold War, Hot Properties

(images via: MissileBases.com <http://www.missilebases.com/>,
RedGypsy1969<http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamayer/2011256219/>and
Roadside
America <http://www.roadsideamerica.com/story/16730>)

The Pedens love living in their renovated missile silo so much, they’ve gone
into business finding and selling similar properties. The couple set up a
real estate company named 20th Century
Castles<http://www.missilebases.com/>and run it from their home in a
decommissioned Atlas E missile site.
*“This has been the best investment of our lifetime, we love our home,”* say
the happy silo-dwellers. *“We sold our first missile site in 1995 and as of
January 2010, we have sold 49 of these properties.”*

(images via: MissileBases.com <http://www.missilebases.com/developedsites>)

One problem the Pedens face is that prime sites are becoming difficult to
find. Many of the newer bases built in the early 1960s are being destroyed
by the government due to international treaty obligations while the older
sites dating back to the 1950s are considered by long-time owners to be
“hard assets” that are steadily rising in value.
Underground Titanic

(images via: Think Or Thwim<http://thinkorthwim.com/index.php?tag=real-estate>,
Wikimedia <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Titan2_color_silo.jpg> and
O’Reilly/MacDevCenter <http://www.oreillynet.com/mac/blog/2002/01/>)

Some of the largest missile silo bases were those constructed to house and
protect Titan II ICBMs. The base depicted above features three missile silos
and associated command & control facilities that take up a total of 47,000
sq ft spread over (under, actually) 57 acres. One of these bases recently
was offered up for
auction<http://thinkorthwim.com/index.php?tag=real-estate>at eBay for
a cool $1.5 million.
>From Launch Pad To Bachelor Pad

(images via: Oddity
Central<http://www.odditycentral.com/pics/living-in-a-missile-silo.html>and
Wired.com <http://www.wired.com/rawfile/2009/10/missile-base-2/all/1>)

America’s nuclear deterrent evolved over time, as did the bases built to
store and – if need be – launch the ICBMs at the evildoers. This gives
homebuyers some leeway in terms of size: both of their investment and their,
er, new digs. Bruce
Townsley<http://www.wired.com/rawfile/2009/10/missile-base-2/all/1>decided
to go the more modest route after seeing Ed Peden discuss his
missile silo home with Johnny Carson on The Tonight Show.

(images via: Oddity
Central<http://www.odditycentral.com/pics/living-in-a-missile-silo.html>
)

In 1997, Townsley plopped down $99,000 for an Atlas F missile base near
Abilene, Texas. While Atlas E sites like the one the Pedens converted were
built to store multiple missiles, Atlas F sites stocked just one, along with
about 2,200 sq ft of living space. By the time Townsley was finished his
renovations, his new home boasted just 1,000 sq ft of space but is bright,
white & cozy.
Down The Hatch!

(images via: Silohome <http://www.silohome.com/>)

Got a hankering for the missile silo lifestyle but can’t be troubled to whip
an old base into shape? Silohome <http://www.silohome.com/> knows what
you’re thinking – they’ve done most (if not all) of the whipping so you
don’t have to. You DO, however, have to plunk down $2.3 million but what you
get is a true turn-key special… not THAT turn-key! Whew, that was a close
one, and so is Silohome’s “model home”, as it were: just a few miles from
Lake Placid, NY. Who knew an Atlas ICBM missile base was in, er, shooting
distance of the 1980 Winter Olympics?

(images via: Silohome <http://www.silohome.com/> and Moviemuse
Reviews<http://moviemusereviews.com/2009/11/new-on-blu-ray-north-by-northwest-1959-4-55-stars/>
)

In any case, Silohome has domesticated the former base inside and out, below
ground and above. It’s even got a small private airstrip in case you want to
invite like-minded fellow travelers over for some pinocle or fly out rolls
of microfilm hidden inside pre-Columbian art ala Hitchcock’s North By
Northwest <http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0053125/>.
Sleeping With The Enemy

(images via: 
WebUrbanist<http://weburbanist.com/2008/01/27/7-abandoned-wonders-of-the-former-soviet-union-from-submarine-stations-to-unfinished-structures/>,
Martin 
rolle<http://www.flickr.com/photos/martintrolle/sets/72157594469877183/>and
Truthdig <http://www.truthdig.com/dig/item/20070319_the_nightmare_scenario/>
)

Perhaps the Pedens and others like them will have to set their sites beyond
the border… catch my drift? You guessed it, Mother Russia! The successor
state to the former Evil Empire has just as many nuclear missile
bases<http://www.truthdig.com/dig/item/20070319_the_nightmare_scenario/>as
the USA (more or less) and a series of treaties dating back to the
mid-1980s has resulted in many of them being abandoned to various degrees.
Better act fast, potential homeowners, lest we fall prey to a missile silo
home gap!

(image via: WorldChanging<http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/007682.html>
)

You may be wondering just why the military, after going to great expense to
build a huge network of missile silos, now sees them as obsolete? Blame
technology – the development of inertial guidance systems in the 1960s
turned the bases into sitting ducks. Much better to have mobile ducks, such
as submarines. Maybe someday, somebody will be selling obsolete nuclear subs
as high-tech <http://weburbanist.com/technology> houseboats… and we wonder
what sort of deterrent will replace them?
 ------------------------------
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