The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A BOOM TIME FOR BUNKERS

Fears of cyberattac­ks, terrorists and anarchy have convinced some people that it’s time to move ... undergroun­d

- Julie Turkewitz

201 FEET UNDERGROUN­D, KAN.

In his pitch to potential buyers, Larry Hall touts his condominiu­m’s high ceilings and spacious living rooms. Then there are the swimming pool, saunas and movie theater. But what really sets the developmen­t apart, in his view, is its ability to survive the apocalypse.

Hall has converted a former military nuclear missile vault into a luxury condominiu­m built 15 stories into the Earth’s crust. He is a leader among a new group of real estate developers investing in the nation’s central prairies and Western foothills: doomsday capitalist­s.

Old fears, new solutions

Americans have, for generation­s, prepared themselves for society’s collapse. They built fallout shelters during the Cold War and basement supply caches ahead of Y2K. But in recent years, personaliz­ed disaster prep has grown into a multimilli­on-dollar business, fueled by a seemingly endless stream of new and revamped threats, from climate change to terrorism, cyberattac­ks and civil unrest.

Bunker builders and brokers have emerged as key players in this field. And they see the interior of the country, with its wide-open spaces, as a prime place to build.

Aiding them is history. During the Cold War, the military spent billions of dollars constructi­ng nuclear warheads and hiding them in undergroun­d lairs around the nation, often in Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma and New Mexico. Those hideaways, emptied of their bombs, are now on the market, and enterprisi­ng civilians are buying them (relatively) cheaply and flipping the properties. Eager customers abound.

The 12 apartments in Hall’s Survival Condo, as he calls it, begin at $1.3 million. When he started selling the condos around 2011, he said, all the units sold within months.

‘Fear sells even better than sex’

To Hall, and to many in his field, this is a calling, not just a business. “I’m saving lives,” he said during a recent visit to his bunker, the exact location of which he insisted be kept under wraps. He entered the building’s elevator as it began its long descent into the earth. “To me, this is something to feel good about.”

These projects have plenty of skeptics, among them John W. Hoopes, a professor of anthropolo­gy at the University of Kansas who spent years studying the myth that the world would

end in 2012. Hoopes accused doomsday investors of hawking “survival porn,” which he described as a “hypermascu­line fantasy” that danger is near and a select few will be able to save themselves and their families — if they are prepared.

“Fear sells even better than sex,” Hoopes said. “If you can make people afraid, you can sell them all kinds of stuff,” he added, “and that includes bunkers.”

But survival homes now dot America’s interior, pulling in clients who are part of a larger movement of people who are choosing to retreat from society, or at least ready themselves for escape.

‘A place of freedom’

Kiki Bandilla, 52, a health insurance agent in Castle Rock, Colorado, distanced herself from people she called “Chicken Littles,” who think “the sky is falling.” She characteri­zed her membership at a survival community called Fortitude Ranch as a reasonable insurance policy.

“I don’t like to be dependent on anything, be it big government, big food sources or big pharma,” she said. “My interest isn’t from a place of fear. My interest is from a place of freedom.”

In recent years, Prepper Camp, a three-day disaster-preparedne­ss and homesteadi­ng expo in North Carolina, has turned into a survivalis­t’s Burning Man. PrepperCon, outside Salt Lake City, has drawn thousands of visitors. Bunker-in-abox companies have proliferat­ed, sending ready-made shelters to suburban doorsteps. High-end real estate agents now track down hideaways for California techies and Texas oil executives.

Bipartisan jitters

Bunker clients say they are united not by ideology — liberals, conservati­ves and political agnostics exist side by side in this world — but by a belief that global forces have left societies increasing­ly vulnerable to large-scale disaster.

Tom S., 69, who works in informatio­n technology and lives outside Atlanta, purchased a former weapons cellar in South Dakota after becoming increasing­ly concerned about political unrest, among other things. His 2,200-square-foot bunker is also a great jumping-off point for exploring the Rockies, and he and his wife plan to use it as a home base when he retires, he said.

Tom declined to make his last name public, citing concern that he would be harassed online, but he said the purchase had the incidental effect of putting him in touch with his political opposites.

He identifies as conservati­ve but his bunker neighbor is liberal,

and they once had a spirited conversati­on about President Donald Trump.

An elaborate home

In Kansas, Hall, 62, of Survival Condo, has become one of this industry’s best-known businessme­n, mostly because of the complexity of his operation and his savvy promotion efforts.

The condo sits down a country road, past grazing cattle, a wire fence and a guard in fatigues gripping a rifle. Visitors enter through a concrete dome; below sit the apartments, outfitted with fake windows made of digital screens; the subterrane­an swimming pool; a dog park; a weapons cache; and storerooms for food. Buyers pay monthly condominiu­m fees of about $2,600.

Hall has outfitted the building with five air filters, connected it to the electrical grid, drilled a well to the local aquifer, and set up diesel generators, a wind turbine and a battery bank, all for backup power.

The doors that cap the entire operation weigh 16 tons, and close behind visitors with a booming slam.

An early convert

Hall spent a career building data centers for defense contractor­s like Northrop Grumman. After 9/11, shaken by the attacks, he hatched a plan to build protected informatio­n hubs; when he saw that the market was glutted, he turned to protecting people.

From his defense days, Hall knew that the government had been selling off its undergroun­d weapons warehouses. In 2008, he purchased one for about $300,000 and told his wife, Lori, and young son that they were moving from Florida to Colorado so he could start his bunker business. That silo soon became the Kansas Survival Condo.

Lori Hall, sitting in a cushioned chair in the bunker living

room, said friends warned her against the project. But she admired her husband’s creative spirit and threw her support behind him. “It’s hard to be the first one,” she said.

The site had initially held an Atlas-F missile, an interconti­nental weapon with a warhead hundreds of times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Nagasaki. The missiles, built and buried around 1960, lasted only five years in their hide-outs, before they were removed and converted into space rocket launchers, or scrapped entirely. The military had decided to replace them with more sophistica­ted missiles and abandon the bunkers. The Air Force eventually turned the empty vaults over to the General Services Administra­tion, which auctioned them off to civilians.

Remodeling a hole

The Survival Condo vault, which cost the military millions to build, was sold to a civilian in 1967 for $3,030 and passed through several owners before making it to Hall.

It cost Hall $20 million to remodel what was in fact a hole in the ground, money he raised from pre-sale of the units. Because few banks issue loans for bunkers, his clients financed their apartments themselves, wiring him the cash.

More recently, he has purchased a second Kansas vault. He mostly broke even on the initial project, he said, and swears that interest in the second one “is picking up.” Among the potential buyers, he said, are representa­tives of the Saudi Arabian military, who have asked him to draw up plans for an on-site heliport and undergroun­d mosque.

The Saudi Embassy in Washington declined to comment.

But build-out of the new bunker, which is three times as big as the first, now occupies most of his time. There is so much to get done, he said, and the end could come any minute.

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 ??  ?? Left: A movie theater is one of the features Larry Hall put into the Survival Condo, which has 12 units starting at $1.3 million, outfitted with fake windows made of digital screens. Right: Buyers pay a $2,600 monthly fee to enjoy the undergroun­d pool and other amenities.
Left: A movie theater is one of the features Larry Hall put into the Survival Condo, which has 12 units starting at $1.3 million, outfitted with fake windows made of digital screens. Right: Buyers pay a $2,600 monthly fee to enjoy the undergroun­d pool and other amenities.
 ?? PHOTOS BY CHET STRANGE / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Right: The doors that cap the operation weigh 16 tons and close behind visitors with a booming slam.
PHOTOS BY CHET STRANGE / THE NEW YORK TIMES Right: The doors that cap the operation weigh 16 tons and close behind visitors with a booming slam.
 ??  ?? Above: Larry Hall works in the security room of the Survival Condo, a former nuclear missile vault converted into high-end residences in Glasco, Kan.
Above: Larry Hall works in the security room of the Survival Condo, a former nuclear missile vault converted into high-end residences in Glasco, Kan.

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