Montreal Gazette

Atlanta-area ‘safe house’ lists for $14.7 million

- AMY DOBSON

The safest house in America might be a sprawling 36,000-square-foot compound outside Atlanta. And it’s a bargain at US$14.7 million.

Built to last 1,000 years and to withstand every type of attack, the eight-bedroom, 15-bathroom house cost US $30 million to constructa­nd was reduced from its list price of US$17.5 million.

Because the buyer of such a fortified property likely would not want lots of details about it made public, listing agent Paul Wegener of Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty has declined to divulge the exact location and name of its owner. Now in his 80s, the seller had the idea for this home since childhood and planned to leave it to his son. However, the son decided he didn’t want to live there so the owner has put it on the market before all the final touches are in place.

“When it was decided that he wasn’t going to legacy the home ... the decision was made not to do all these interior finishes but to leave that canvas for the next owner,” Wegener said.

The walls, built to withstand machine-gunfire, are made of wood frame constructi­on reinforced with rebar and concrete with a strength of 5,000 pounds per square inch. Typical home constructi­on uses concrete between 3,000 and 4,000 pounds per square inch. Braided copper wires wrap around the wood framing to make the building safe from lightning strikes.

Security expert Al Corbi, who has designed classified facilities for the U.S. government, came up with the safety design for the property. It includes a 15,000-square-foot, concrete-fortified bunker deep within the main building with multiple concealed entrances.

Interior and exterior doors throughout the house have three layers of Kevlar so they can withstand ballistic attacks, and a system of chromalloy pins that extend from the door’s edge in to the frame provide more than one locking mechanism for each entryway.

Should intruders make their way to the inner chamber soft he house, they would still be vulnerable to a defence system called Man Traps, Wegener said. These discreetly placed nozzles can release stored gases that could incapacita­te the person (if the homeowner has obtained noxious enough materials) or at least use harmless gases to obscure the visibility in the room so someone can’t escape.

An observatio­n tower with remote window control oversees the property. It comes with a glass floor and secret spiral staircase entry so residents can see enemies coming and make a quick getaway.

The home has all the requiremen­ts for living off the grid — including water, electricit­y, heating and a pantry big enough to hold a three-year supply of food.

Three artesian wells at a depth of more than 1,000 feet — at least one of which is connected to an aquifer — provide access to fresh water, Wegener said. A 17,000-gallon storage tank acts as a reservoir.

If the main electric grid fails, power can come from solar panels or two undergroun­d whole-house generators. The generators are storedinKe­vlar-fortifiedb­unkers..

Geothermal heating provides climate control via 27 heat pumps throughout the property. “This home operates at a tenth of the cost of a home traditiona­lly this size ,” We gene rs aid .“Traditiona­lly, a home that was 36,000 square feet would not operate efficientl­y. But this one does.”

A few of the features that aren’t fully finished include space for a 750-square-foot home theatre, a wine cellar, two elevator shafts and a bridge onto the driveway that can pop spikes out to prevent vehicles from entering or exiting the property.

The 30-car garage, referred to as the Bat Cave, is nearly complete. The only piece of the design that still needs to be added is the waterfall that conceals the entrance.

The home also caters to luxury living with a front entrance modelled after Venice’s Rialto Bridge, three kitchens, a fireplace in the master bedroom, staff quarters, vaulted ceilings and enough entertaini­ng space to host a 600-person event.

 ?? PAUL WEGENER/ATLANTA FINE HOMES ?? The 36,000-square-foot safe house near Atlanta took about six years to build with a full-time crew. The owner, now in his 80s, had been planning to build a home with this level of security ever since he was 10.
PAUL WEGENER/ATLANTA FINE HOMES The 36,000-square-foot safe house near Atlanta took about six years to build with a full-time crew. The owner, now in his 80s, had been planning to build a home with this level of security ever since he was 10.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada