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View Full Version : Sales of luxe doomsday bunkers up 1,000%



osoab
29th March 2011, 08:00 PM
Sales of luxe doomsday bunkers up 1,000% (http://money.cnn.com/2011/03/22/real_estate/doomsday_bunkers/index.htm?hpt=C2)


NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- A devastating earthquake strikes Japan. A massive tsunami kills thousands. Fears of a nuclear meltdown run rampant. Bloodshed and violence escalate in Libya.

And U.S. companies selling doomsday bunkers are seeing sales skyrocket anywhere from 20% to 1,000%.

Northwest Shelter Systems, which offers shelters ranging in price from $200,000 to $20 million, has seen sales surge 70% since the uprisings in the Middle East, with the Japanese earthquake only spurring further interest. In hard numbers, that's 12 shelters already booked when the company normally sells four shelters per year.

"Sales have gone through the roof, to the point where we are having trouble keeping up," said Northwest Shelter Systems owner Kevin Thompson.

UndergroundBombShelter.com, which sells portable shelters, bomb shelters and underground bunkers, has seen inquiries soar 400% since the Japanese earthquake. So far sales of its $9,500 nuclear biological chemical shelter tents are at an all-time high -- with four sold in California last week, compared to about one a month normally.

Hardened Structures said inquiries have shot up about 20% since the earthquake -- particularly for its apocalyptic 2012 shelters, radiation-protection tents, and nuclear, biological and chemical (NBC) air filters.
0:00 /2:33Living large in an apocalypse bunker

Vivos, a company that sells rooms in 200-person doomsday bunkers, has received thousands of applications since the massive earthquake in Japan, with reservations spiking nearly 1,000% last week. And people are backing their fear with cash: A reservation requires a minimum deposit of $5,000.

"People are afraid of the earth-changing events and ripple effects of the earthquake, which led to tsunamis, the nuclear meltdown, and which will lead to radiation and health concerns," said Vivos CEO Robert Vicino. "Where it ends, I don't know. Does it lead to economic collapse? A true economic collapse would lead to anarchy, which could lead to 90% of the population being killed off."

The last time people flocked to purchase bunkers in such droves was right before the Y2K scare, according to Stephen O'Leary, an associate professor at University of Southern California and an expert on apocalyptic thinking.

"Tens of millions of people believe in a literal apocalypse, which involves earthquakes, storms, disasters of global proportions and especially disasters related to the Middle East," O'Leary said.
Find the nuke plant nearest to you

But, he added, "Some believe that this is just a turbulent time and they have to go somewhere to ride it out."

Elan Yadan, a clothing store owner in Los Angeles, is one of the many customers who rushed to find a bunker last week. Yadan secured a spot for his family in a Vivos' shelter, putting down four deposits totaling $20,000 -- $20,000 that had been earmarked for a down payment on a new house.

"I honestly didn't want to do it, but unfortunately it looks like the worst expectations about the world are starting to come true," said Yadan, who had been reading about Mayan predictions of a global meltdown in 2012. "With the things happening this week, it's better to be safe than sorry. And what good is a house if you don't feel safe?"

Yadan will be riding out any apocalypse in Vivos' most ambitious project to date. The company has more than five 200-person shelters in the U.S. that are in various stages of construction, but this facility outshines them all.

The bunker, which is being built under the grasslands of Nebraska, is 137,000 square feet -- bigger than a Wal-Mart -- can house 950 people for up to one year, and can withstand a 50 megaton blast. Once completed, it will boast four levels of individual suites, a medical and dental center, kitchens, bakery, prayer room, computer area, pool tables, pet kennels, a fully stocked wine cellar and a detention center to place anyone who turns violent.

Plus, there will be a fortified 350-foot lookout tower for residents who want to see what's happening in the outside world.

Once Vivos collects deposits from at least half the number of residents needed to fill the bunker, it will take them on a tour of the near-completed site. At that point, they must pay the rest of the $25,000 reservation fee.

That's what Yadan intends to do.

"I'm not a psychic but I'm not a scientist either, so I'd rather err on the side of caution -- and I'd rather survive and live in a bunker for a year than be wiped out," he said. To top of page

http://i2.cdn.turner.com/money/2011/03/22/real_estate/doomsday_bunkers/terravivos_bunker.top.jpg

Why would you put that amount of coin down to hunker down in Nebraska if you live in L.A.? He would need at least a 2 day head start before TSHTF to make it to his destination, and that is in good weather.

Book
29th March 2011, 09:14 PM
Once Vivos collects deposits from at least half the number of residents needed to fill the bunker, it will take them on a tour of the near-completed site. At that point, they must pay the rest of the $25,000 reservation fee.

:D take his word for it until then

DMac
30th March 2011, 07:35 AM
What bothers me about this article is that a year and a half ago I tried to convince 3 friends (architect, military engineer and a highly capable contractor) that we 4 should start a business building these bunkers. All laughed saying no way would we make money.

:(

Link will be sent out today with another "I told you so" from DMac.

sirgonzo420
30th March 2011, 07:55 AM
What bothers me about this article is that a year and a half ago I tried to convince 3 friends (architect, military engineer and a highly capable contractor) that we 4 should start a business building these bunkers. All laughed saying no way would we make money.

:(

Link will be sent out today with another "I told you so" from DMac.


Yeah but even if you didn't "make money", you'd have a bunker to go to...

Twisted Titan
30th March 2011, 11:39 AM
A bunker makes you feel good

But it really isnt going to solve the bigger problem you have.

But fear sure is a powerful selling point

sirgonzo420
30th March 2011, 11:40 AM
A bunker makes you feel good

But it really isnt going to solve the bigger problem you have.

But fear sure is a powerful selling point


I don't think having a bunker would hurt though.

Twisted Titan
30th March 2011, 12:51 PM
Nah it certainly wouldnt


I remember seeing what a bunker did in "The Road"

It was like the Garden of Eden.


T

sirgonzo420
30th March 2011, 12:52 PM
Nah it certainly wouldnt


I remember seeing what a bunker did in "The Road"

It was like the Garden of Eden.


T


Yeah, except instead of getting kicked out and kept out by an angel with a flaming sword, they LEFT!


???

JDRock
30th March 2011, 12:55 PM
WTF?? luxury and a shtf scenario are INCOMPATABLE. Period.

Half Sense
31st March 2011, 02:03 PM
Yeah but even if you didn't "make money", you'd have a bunker to go to...


You'd have the locations of all the bunkers you'd built + maybe extra keys and security codes, LOL

So one day the SHTF and all the elites run to their bunkers, only to find them already occupied by GIMmers.

singular_me
19th March 2017, 11:29 AM
this is scifi out there, like I have said a gazillion times so far
-----------------------------------------------------------

An underground golf range, a rock climbing wall and an indoor pool complete with a water slide: The luxury nuclear bunker so popular with the super rich that they're building another one

The 'doomsday-proof' homes are many metres below ground in an obsolete nuclear missile site, in Kansas
Development has bunkers that give long-term protection for residents against nuclear war or other disasters
The complexes, constructed when the US built missile launch facilities, come with multiple safety features

Survival condos are designed to hold up to 70 people and have enough resources to keep them alive for years

The Survival Condo Project is a luxury complex housed 15 stories below ground in a former missile silo near Concordia, Kansas.

A full-floor apartment, spanning 1,800 square feet, will set buyers back $3million, while a 900-square-foot, half-floor unit is $1.5million. Penthouse variants are available for $4.5million.

It is designed to comfortably survive any apocalyptic disaster such as global health pandemics, cataclysmic weather and terror attacks, including a nuclear one.

The windows are designed to simulate normal patterns of sunrise and sunset, and display views appropriate to their angles to simulate the feeling of being above ground.


Following incredible demand for the first 'survival chic' apartments, people now have a chance to snap up a luxury nuclear bunker. The missile silo was originally built by the US Army Corps of Engineers in the 1960s for the Atlas F missile, and there were 72 of them around the country
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/02/01/16/3CB99E0B00000578-0-image-a-6_1485968037975.jpg

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4181010/New-nuclear-bunker-development-super-rich.html#ixzz4bnFTQHqG
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook


ALSO
http://www.kansas.com/news/local/article134892379.html

old steel
19th March 2017, 12:54 PM
Yeah, except instead of getting kicked out and kept out by an angel with a flaming sword, they LEFT!


???



That would only happen in a Hollywood movie.

crimethink
19th March 2017, 07:38 PM
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2017/02/01/16/3CB99E0B00000578-0-image-a-6_1485968037975.jpg

These fools seem to think these are impregnable. A smart, determined attacker would simply disable or destroy the recirculation intakes for the air supply (which are filtered and valved, but can simply be blocked with debris or blown up).

singular_me
20th March 2017, 05:41 AM
No if but WHEN


We Kill Each Other For PAPER

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HpXjQJr8gBk