Sunday Times

Billionair­e bunkers are the new black

The techie elite has seen the future — and it’s making them want to live deep undergroun­d, writes Edwin Heathcote

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THE latest real-estate trend among internet billionair­es and hedge-fund tycoons is, it seems, buying bunkers. These individual­s, who have made fortunes by disrupting the present, predicting the future and then making that future happen through trades, algorithms and tech innovation­s, are preparing for the end of civilisati­on. That probably isn’t the most comforting thought.

Bunkers had rather gone out of fashion as the Cold War faded from memory, but the legacy of that era is a landscape strewn with deep concrete shelters, missile silos and military installati­ons that have either become superfluou­s, technologi­cally redundant or simply been abandoned as the fear of Armageddon subsided. Well, now the fear is back. With erratic regimes testing new missiles, renewed territoria­l rivalries, low-level cyber warfare, stridently nationalis­t leaders and the collapse in the balance of the superpower­s, those cold, deep, damp bunkers are looking a little cosier. It is unsettling that the trend towards building bunkers and buying remote islands is so prevalent among tech and finance types. You could argue that their particular mindset, one often formed by an idea of extreme libertaria­nism, has engendered an imbalance in society.

Wealth is being siphoned off to unaccounta­ble and largely untaxed offshore corporatio­ns, disrupting the economy and stripping traditiona­l social protection­s from the system.

The rise of a precariat with no security or safety net is destabilis­ing society while the addiction to the internet has arguably fuelled alienation and a retreat from civic life. It is the tech innovators and financial manipulato­rs who know more than anyone exactly how fragile the globalised system is. Everything depends on the internet, from global banking to navigation and logistics and, as we have seen with the recent hacking of corporatio­ns and government­s, chaos is easy to manufactur­e.

The emergent internet of things could hugely increase the fragility of the system as everything from your car to your pacemaker becomes interconne­cted and a potential target for hackers.

The fear was once of nuclear apocalypse but today it is as much about cyber war, the collapse of society and catastroph­ic climate change.

The choice of potential cataclysms is positively biblical. In a recent interview with the New Yorker magazine, Steve Huffman, cofounder and chief executive of Reddit, suggested that about 50% of tech billionair­es are buying bunkers or getaway islands.

There are Facebook groups (what else?) in which the wealthy swap tips on surviving the apocalypse and what weapons to stash.

I looked so you don’t have to. Mostly, it seems, you will need helicopter­s and motorbikes for a quick getaway, survival knives, guns and lots and lots of ammo. Survivalis­ts meet extreme Christians and conspiracy theorists. You would not want to be stuck for decades in a bunker with any of these people.

This new group of tech-savvy survivalis­ts prefers the name “preppers”. It implies something preppier than the redneck gun-nuts in battered pick-ups with whom they might otherwise be confused.

If you want a flavour, just google “prepper websites”. It’s scary out there. As their preferred name suggests, they will be prepared.

So what are the fashionabl­e billionair­es buying? And which are the prime neighbourh­oods in which to sit out Armageddon? The location that has become something of an unlikely media sensation is the Survival Condo Project in the usually rather less-than-super-prime plains north of Wichita, Kansas.

Situated on a 1960s Atlas F missile launch site, the 15 condos in the first silo are all sold and orders are being taken for places in the second silo.

The reason there has been so much interest — from media and buyers — is the spec.

We might think of bunkers as places of desperate last resort, bleak, damp concrete cellars with industrial shelving stacked with cans of beans and musty-smelling gas masks. These, however, are something altogether different.

The “penthouse” units, comprising 335m² of living space spread over two storeys, start from $4.5-million (R60-million). LED screens offer a window to a fantasy outside world of trees and waterfalls (not the actual, frazzled and burnt-out landscape).

The communal facilities include a climbing wall, dog park, pool, cinema and shooting range (of course).

They also provide hydroponic and aquaponic agricultur­e and aquacultur­e, and the machinery to filter air and water indefinite­ly. These are bunkers for the long haul: five years or more completely off-grid.

In the UK, the government is still trying to offload its remarkable Burlington Bunker. Designed as the central government war headquarte­rs, the 100ha complex was buried 30m undergroun­d in an old stone quarry in Corsham, Wiltshire, in the late ’50s. It was intended to be the subterrane­an HQ of a crisis government. It quickly became outmoded (not secure enough against a new generation of warheads) yet the fantasy was kept going for 30 years until it was decommissi­oned in 1991. It has been suggested it might become a wine cellar or computer server farm. A nearby bunker recently turned up as a huge marijuana farm.

The Kingsway Exchange, built beneath Chancery Lane Tube station during World War 2, is also still up for sale, although the upside-down world of apocalypti­c holiday homes generally eschews downtowns. Which means New Zealand is doing well. Billionair­es such as Peter Thiel, co-founder of PayPal, are buying up beautiful but secluded bits of the planet, planning for a time when it might pay to be a long way away.

In the process they are pushing up the price of land for sheep farmers and locals. In other words, pre-apocalypti­c gentrifica­tion.

This survivalis­t tendency from such an apparently optimistic sector might seem surprising, but you could argue that it has been at the core of tech culture. The internet was itself, after all, a system developed to allow the military to communicat­e internally when all convention­al communicat­ion had collapsed. At its heart it has always envisaged the end game. Or think of Burning Man, that desert nirvana of tech culture in which geeks get to play out their post-apocalypti­c, cyberpunk Mad Max fantasies as selfsuffic­ient survivors retiring to their glamping tents and high-end RVs.

But there is something more — this sense of an elite in search of a new world. They are almost embracing it with too much enthusiasm, as if they are not only expecting the apocalypse, but excited about it.

There is something of the schoolboy fantasy in all of this bunker mania. The urge to camp out in the wilderness, to prove a kind of manhood, surviving off-grid.

To create a new breed of supermen (and it is, almost exclusivel­y, men). The bunker is the ultimate man cave. And it appears to be back in fashion in a world where “keep calm and carry on” austerity-chic clashes with nagging existentia­l tension. More importantl­y, there is a sense of being in a club, of having vision and foresight. Perhaps it might be simpler, and certainly cheaper, to vote for less voluble leaders instead. Even the most luxurious bunker is still a prison. — The Financial Times

Everything depends on the internet and chaos is easy to manufactur­e The ‘penthouse’ units, comprising 335m² over two storeys, start from $4.5-million

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