The Palm Beach Post

Many say: Gimme shelters

Texas bomb-bunker builder stays busy as customers prepare for ‘Trumpocaly­pse.’

- By Gordon Dickson Fort Worth Star-Telegram

MURCHISON, TEXAS — Inside his football-field-sized warehouse an hour’s drive southeast of Dallas, Gary Lynch is busy trying to keep up with orders for his solid-steel bomb shelters.

He offers visitors a tour of a 600-square-foot model under construc tion for a Saudi customer.

Right now, it’s just a steel shell, he said, but when the work is done, it will be a luxurious undergroun­d bunker with a master bedroom, four bunk beds, a composting toilet, a living room with satellite television capability, filtered air and water, and a storage closet with room for months of food.

Lynch explains that orders for his most expensive shelters, which can cost as much as several million dollars, have increased since the November election.

“It definitely has picked up a little as Donald Trump emerged as president,” said Lynch, general manager of Rising S Co. on the outskirts of the rural city of Murchison. Lynch said some customers even half-jokingly say they’re trying to protect themselves from a “Trumpocaly­pse” or “Trumpnado.”

“There’s some people who maybe even voted for Donald Trump and may be worried some of the riots are going to get out of hand and there’s going to be social or civil unrest,” he said.

“Then you’ve got people who di dn’t vo t e f or hi m and are thinking that now that he’s president maybe he’s going to st ar t a war. There’s definitely been some renewed interest from people since the election.”

Doomsday prepping — the act of stockpilin­g food and other essentials in a reinforced, often-undergroun­d shelter — used to be mostly associated with Libertaria­n-leaning Americans who feared their own government would turn on them.

But now that Trump has taken office, some centrists and left-leaning folks also are building bomb shelters under their homes and businesses, apparently fearing either civil strife or war with an external enemy.

S a l e s o f t h e most l u xu r i o u s R i s i n g S s h e l t e r s have jumped 700 percent in recent months, he said. Lynch didn’t provide specific data on how many units he typically sells, but he said Rising S Co. recorded about $14 million in sales during the past year.

Although Lynch credits Trump’s surprising rise to power for the latest sales spike, he said a similar jump in sales occurred eight years ago when President Obama took office.

He has been building shelters for 13 years.

“When a Republican is president, the left wants to buy a bunker,” he said. “It’s the opposite when a Democrat is president.”

Fear of unknown

The phrase “#Trumpocaly­pse” has taken on a life of its own on social media such as Twitter.

And a quick search online shows many other examples of people taking advantage of Trump’s knack for controvers­y to sell their fare.

For example, in Pearsall, south of San Antonio, a Craigsli st seller named Dan was offering used buses for $3,000 to $5,000 and explaining in his advertisem­ent that they “make good Trump Bunkers and Bomb Shelters.”

“You Know Who’s Finger will be on the Button,” the ad continues. “Make America Great Again. Buy a Bus. All are welcome. Pro Don- ald. Pro Hilary. (sic) Can we all be friends again?”

America has a long history of building bomb shelters, going back to the days of the Cold War with the Soviet Union shortly after World War II.

In the 1950s and 1960s, thousands of homeowners built undergroun­d escape rooms — something encouraged by President John F. Kennedy, a Democrat who presided over the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, which nearly brought the U.S. and Russia to nuclear blows.

America’s bunker mentality is the stuff of movies and historical lore. The desire for blastproof walls, filtrated air and water, and composting toilets is deeply embedded in the national psyche.

And, although it’s an issue that typically only comes up during a leadership change, domestic strife or a global crisis, the desire to be safe from harm — to have a place where loved ones can hunker down indefinite­ly — seems to always burn in the nation’s collective belly.

It’s a different story with storm shelters, similar structures that can be built either undergroun­d or as a “safe room” within a home. Storm shelters tend to grow in pop- ularity after a major disaster such as the tornado in 1997 that killed 27 people in the central Texas city of Jarrell, or the one two years later that killed 36 people in the Oklahoma City area.

According to the Lubbock, Texas-based National Storm Shelter Associatio­n, which applies its official seal to shelters that meet high constructi­on and design standards, “sales are half what they were three years ago,” Executive Director Ernst Kiesling said.

After a major incident such as a tornado or hurricane, Federal Emergency Management Agency money can sometimes be made available to offset some of the cost of shelter constructi­on, depending upon how states and cities use the federal funds.

But the demand for shelters usually only lasts about as long as the cleanup, Kiesling said.

“After an incident, there will be an upsurge among the public, but it will subside rather quickly,” he said.

S t o r m s h e l t e r s c a n b e undergroun­d, or they can be built at ground level in a home. They can be made of steel, fiberglass or other materials.

Although they typically don’t have the long-term accommodat­ions for people to live in indefinite­ly, like a bomb shelter, storm shel- General manager, Rising S Co. ters can also provide residents with a “safe room” to escape dangers such as gunfire or a home intruder.

But usually it’s concern about enemies of the state — whether foreign or domestic — that motivates someone to install a bunker in a home or business.

Peter Westwick teaches a class on the atomic age at the University of Southern California and sometimes shows his students a photo that he took just a few years ago of a commercial building in Los Angeles called Atlas Survival Shelters. The otherwise-nondescrip­t metal building features an outside display of a bright yellow bomb shelter the size of fuel truck.

The photo illustrate­s how l i t t l e has c hanged a bout Americans’ concern for the long-term security of their republic since the 1950s, he said.

“I sometimes use a picture I took of a shelter manufactur­er here in LA, just off the 5 freeway, to show these fears haven’t gone away,” Westwick said in an email. “But they have changed, to a broader doomsday/survivalis­m instead of just nuclear fear.”

Of the current interest in shelters, Westwick said, “I think you could indeed say that the losing side in an election often takes a catastroph­ic view of the outcome. You might consider the migration to the Idaho, Montana, Wyoming region by conservati­ve or Libertaria­n adherents following Obama’s election.

“There’s an issue here with whether the survivalis­ts fear an external enemy (e.g. the Soviet Union, albeit aided by Communists in American society) or an internal one (e.g. the Idaho survivalis­ts apparently fearing their own government and fellow citizens).

“The current fears seem to be more of Trump provoking an external enemy, whether another state or stateless terrorists,” he said.

Often, customers who buy bomb shelters are wealthy.

Steve Huffman, founder of the Reddit social news aggregatio­n site, acknowledg­ed in a recent New Yorker story that he is obsessed with surviving a catastroph­e.

In that same article, many other wealthy elite from New York, San Francisco and other tony places say they’re stocking up on gas masks, motorcycle­s (more nimble and fuel- effic ient than cars during a crisis) and other essentials to escape from the expected confusion and panic that likely would envelop and overtake those who had failed to prepare.

But bomb shelters don’t have to break the bank.

S o m e m a n u f a c t u r e r s of fer cl oset- s i z ed undergroun­d bunkers for as little as $5,000.

At Ri s i ng S Co., Lynch said he and his roughly 40 employees can’t sell anything that cheap. They use the finest, Alabama-made steel and an air purificati­on system with a patent pending on its design — and materials like that come at a cost.

Rising S Co.’s shelters also feature a water purificati­on system that can be designed to pull water from an undergroun­d well, a municipal water system or a storage tank.

But Lynch said he can set up customers with an entrylevel shelter approximat­ely 4 feet by 6 feet for roughly $10,000.

In fact, he has one of those basic models under constructi­on right now in his warehouse off Texas 31 in Murchison, right alongside the undergroun­d virtual palace his crew is building for that wealthy Saudi customer.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JOYCE MARSHALL / FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM ?? Employees work on a bomb shelter recently at Rising S Co. in a football-field-sized warehouse in Murchison, Texas, an hour’s drive southeast of Dallas.
PHOTOS BY JOYCE MARSHALL / FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM Employees work on a bomb shelter recently at Rising S Co. in a football-field-sized warehouse in Murchison, Texas, an hour’s drive southeast of Dallas.
 ??  ?? Gary Lynch, showing part of a bomb shelter under constructi­on, said sales of the most luxurious models have jumped 700 percent in recent months.
Gary Lynch, showing part of a bomb shelter under constructi­on, said sales of the most luxurious models have jumped 700 percent in recent months.
 ??  ?? Rising S Co. says it uses the finest, Alabama-made steel in its shelters.
Rising S Co. says it uses the finest, Alabama-made steel in its shelters.
 ??  ?? Air filters go with bomb shelters under constructi­on recently at Rising S Co.
Air filters go with bomb shelters under constructi­on recently at Rising S Co.
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