A supply of 24,000 gallons of water was
preserved in underground tanks, along with enough food to feed 600 people for three months. At a daily dietary intake of 2,400 “calories” (kilocalories),
a human body produces around 117 Watts of heat, and so, at full capacity, 70 kW of heat would need to be dissipated, for which an extensive cooling
system was emplaced. The air supply into the bunker was drawn from the outside
through a primary and secondary filtration system, and traces of dust not thus
intercepted, were removed by a fine spray of water to avoid introducing any radioactive contamination. A facility was also installed with sufficient power that, in case of fire or other source of toxic release, all the air from the bunker could be extracted within 10 minutes. Since the whole is, in effect, a rather voluminous three-storey building, I imagine that to have been in there
during such an operation would have been quite an experience.
Once the blast doors had been closed, that was it for the next 3 months. Some of the personnel were armed, and so anyone getting cabin fever and trying to escape would have been shot immediately, so as not to breach the security of the rest. The sanitation arrangements were interesting, since once the tanks from the latrines were full, the pumps would come into play, automatically discharging their contents to the surface in a powerful jet, possibly adding to the discomfort of anyone still surviving and unfortunate enough to get in the way of it!
Once the blast doors had been closed, that was it for the next 3 months. Some of the personnel were armed, and so anyone getting cabin fever and trying to escape would have been shot immediately, so as not to breach the security of the rest. The sanitation arrangements were interesting, since once the tanks from the latrines were full, the pumps would come into play, automatically discharging their contents to the surface in a powerful jet, possibly adding to the discomfort of anyone still surviving and unfortunate enough to get in the way of it!
In
the anticipation that medical attention
would be needed among the 600 throng, there was a sickbay, including a basic operating theatre, on the second floor,
and also a supply of cardboard coffins, which stack flat. After about 3 days,
a corpse begins to balloon with the gases of its incipient decomposition, and so the dead would be returned to the outside fairly rapidly. Since the living need sleep, there were dormitories – with the “hot
bed” system intended – so that as one person went on shift, another would take
his place in the warm bed, although with no lights on, this would be a noisy
procedure and probably very little rest would be had by anybody.
The
bunker is no longer “secret”, and is quite well signposted. It was decommissioned
in 1992, and is now privately owned as a tourist attraction. Though never used
for its purpose, the bunker was inaugurated entirely during the “cold war” period - such was Western fear of an all-out nuclear attack from “The Russians” - and is not a
relic from WWII. Altogether, there were 12 bunkers of this kind built across
the country, and connected by telephone cables set deep into the ground, so
that communication could be maintained, even while the civilian population was
being reduced by radiation sickness, starvation and marauding gangs, beyond
those already killed instantly by the nuclear explosions.
There
are many parallels that might be drawn between the mentality of the bunker, in anticipation
of a nuclear attack by a foreign power, and the survival of humanity in the face of peak oil and ultimately
climate change. Will a select few try to hide behind barriers, while the rest
tear each other apart, fighting for what resources are left? In reality, there
would have been nothing left for those in the nuclear bunker to come out to. The
crops of the first year would have been destroyed by extreme cold and in the
second year, there would have been little growth beneath the dust-filled skies
of this nuclear winter. Much of the population would have been dead, and the
land and infrastructure inhospitable to start anew. In reality, those “protected”
few would have been condemned along with the huddled masses they sheltered from,
once their carefully squirrelled resources had run dry. The only course
for humankind is to create a stable set of conditions, which such catastrophes cannot be part of;
where our immediate security is not vulnerable to disruptions in exogenous global
supply chains or threats from external forces. We, all of us, stand or fall
together in the unfolding future - a choice of implementing the structures of local resilience over those of global dependency.The threat to human civilization is no longer of an external kind, but lies in our actions and behaviour - we cannot hide from ourselves.
2 comments:
Chris,
When I was a kid living in Colorado Springs, my grandfather took me for a tour of NORAD (North American Air Defense Command). I recall a long tunnel (more than a mile) into Cheyenne mountain that was U shaped and about midway down the tunnel were two massive doors about 5 feet thick (at right angle to the main tunnel) mounted so that a 20 ft room between them could be evacuated of air to the point a human would suffocate. What I remember the most was the fact that the inside of this massive granite mountain had been hollowed out and 3 storey steel buildings had been built on top of massive steel springs that would absorb earth quakes caused by direct hits. There were buildings with gyms, locker rooms, cafeterias and hospital…but most impressive was the enormous building stuffed with computers and communications hardware. The main control room was like a conference hall with dozens of people at desks watching computer screens and giant screens on the walls with all kinds of information passing by. As a kid, I remember thinking how horrific it would be to be caught inside this place for months at a time knowing the outside world was doomed.
Apparently they do not give tours of this facility anymore, so I count myself lucky to have seen what limitless government spending can achieve.
Cheers,
Ken
S/V Trim
Hi Ken,
sounds like the bunker you saw was designed to take a direct hit, and I suspect that the one in Essex was intended, in large measure, to keep the select few safe from the marauding hoards who, having survived the blast and fallout, would be tearing each other apart to get food, shelter, firewood and whatever else they needed.
Nonetheless, it is an amazing place. It is fantastic how well thought through it all was, including the sewage discharge system! There was also a facility to evacuate all the air from the bunker (as you say, or similar to it, a 3 storey building) within 10 minutes. To be in there during such an operation would have been quite an experience, I would imagine!
Once the blast doors had been closed, that was it for the next 3 months. Some of the personnel were armed, and so anyone getting cabin fever and trying to escape would have been shot immediately.
But the fate of those "safe" in the bunker would have been a slow death, once the 3 months was over, with a majority of the population having perished either quickly or less so, extremely cold, no food, and nothing much growing.
A dreadful scenario that would have meant "game over" for everybody. It might have been better to be standing outside when the bomb went off, and just get it over with!
But indeed, it does show what can be achieved with sufficient will and funding from central government, and in quick time, at that!
Cheers,
Chris
Post a Comment