The Granddaddy Of All Underground Storage Areas, poradniki, podręczniki i zakazane e-booki
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The
Granddaddy
Of All Underground
Storage Areas
There are root cellars and then there are root cellars. This
web page covers an underground storage container made
from culvert. This concept is extremely bold in every way.
When it comes to underground storage, this may very well be the granddaddy of them all.
I am convinced this is one of the finest underground storage ideas you will find
anywhere. This page features one of these storage areas, which should help you
understand their possibilities and perhaps even get you thinking about what you would
like if you designed one for yourself.
Jump within page to...
A bold new concept
Easily and quickly constructed
Quickly set into place
Inexpensive for the size
Plenty of room
Easily adaptable as an underground shelter
Easily hidden from view - no one even needs to know it’s there.
Where to learn more
A bold new concept: Whoever thought of this ranks as a genius of the simple. Basically,
this underground storage area is made in a culvert that was designed for bridging creeks.
Culverts are thin steel pipes that are very strong, light for their size, inexpensive when
compared to other types of construction, galvanized and therefore rustproof. They come
in a wide variety of sizes, from as small as one foot in diameter to 20 feet in diameter and
bigger. Because of the huge size possibilities, culverts can fit into just about anyone’s
underground storage needs. Our showcase structure was built into an eight foot culvert,
however, many people building this type of shelter are now using ten foot culverts.
Easily and quickly constructed: This photo shows the culvert as it was near the end of
construction. It is made from an eight foot culvert 50 feet long. Steel plates were welded
onto each end to enclose the culvert. A one foot in diameter vent tube, again made from
culvert, was placed in the top of the culvert on each end (not shown). The culvert coming
off the top side of the main culvert at one end in the photo is a four foot culvert. Before
the shelter was set into place, the culvert was rotated down so the small attached culvert
was on the side of the main culvert. Then a length of four foot diameter culvert was
welded on which became the entrance way. Before it was set into place, the entire outside
surface, especially the welded portions, were sprayed with tar to prevent rusting. The
floor inside the culvert was constructed from 2X4s and 1 inch plywood. This was placed
in the culvert at the five foot wide point, being about 10 inches above the bottom of the
culvert. With the floor at this point, there is slightly over seven feet of head room when
standing. Next came the door on the front of the entrance way. Our featured shelter has a
small six by six foot porch built around the culvert entrance which has a wooden door to
the outside. There is also a second inner door constructed from steel, enclosing the four
foot diameter entrance culvert. All that remains to be done is to put in the walls and
shelves.
Quickly set into place: The hole for this shelter was dug in one day. The shelter was
brought in and set into place with the vents and entrance pipe welded into place the next
day, then it was buried the third day.
Inexpensive for the size: The owner of our featured shelter spent $5,000 in 1990 on all
aspects of constructing and burying this shelter. (It would cost about $10K now (1998)
with the proper blast doors.) He did say that a lot of the wood for the floor and shelves
was scrounged.
Plenty of room: Our featured shelter’s 5 foot wide
floor has 250 square feet of surface. Total storage
area volume comes out to about 2,400 cubic feet.
Easily adaptable as an underground shelter: Our
featured shelter has a bed, dresser, small living
area, library, and a large storage area.
This photo shows the end of the shelter next to the
entrance. Note the 4 foot diameter culvert coming
off the left just before the bed. The entrance pipe
wasn't put on the very end of the 50 foot long
culvert for a very good reason - so the bed would
fit. Note also the vent pipe in the ceiling. The
owner said he would cut it off close to flush with
the ceiling if he had to do it over again.
We show you the first photo again to explain the two rock towers on top of the shelter.
These enclose the vents, and was done this way so kids couldn't shoot holes through
them.
Your underground shelter can easily be hidden from view - no one even needs to know
it’s there: With a tiny bit of forethought and planning, the vents could be easily hidden by
terrain, in shrubbery, a rock garden, or in carefully placed outbuildings. The same could
be done with the entrance way.
Where to learn more:
Sharon Packer, a nuclear engineer and the head of the Civil
Defense Volunteers of Utah has written a 150 page 8 1/2 by 11 inch book called Nuclear
Defence Issues. You should get one if you are contemplating building one of these
shelters. This book sells for $25.00 and includes:
National Security Affairs
Weapons Effects
Building the Shelter
Post War Survival
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