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Doomsday safe-haven offered under Mojave Desert
The nuke-proof bunker will feature an atrium,
gym and jail
Source: www.ap.org
BARSTOW, Calif. (AP) -- A company with a doomsday
plan is taking money for what it promises will
be a comfortable, nuke-proof bunker under the
Mojave Desert, with an atrium, gym and jail, and
sloppy joes and pearl potatoes on the menu.
Robert Vicino, who runs the Del Mar-based company
called Vivos, has collected deposits on half the
132 spaces planned in the 13,000-square-foot bunker
in Barstow.
The facility is among several popping up across
the country as fears of doomsday have been fueled
recently by strong earthquakes, terrorism and
predictions of the world's end in 2012 when the
ancient Mayan calendar is said to end.
"I'm careful not to promote fear. But sooner
or later, I believe you're going to need to seek
shelter," said Vicino, a real estate salesman
whose career started with advertising and moved
on to timeshares.
The political climate now in some ways reflects
the Cold War era, when many Americans dug backyard
fallout shelters, said Jeffrey Knopf, an associate
professor of national security affairs at the
Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey.
"There's a lot of free-floating anxiety
out there about the dangers that terrorists will
get nuclear weapons and it multiplies," he
said.
Facilities such as Vicino's are attracting interest
in other states such as Oregon and Kansas, where
one engineer is developing underground survival
condos for $1.75 million.
In Barstow, $50,000 will get a bunk in a four-person
room. Vicino is still taking reservations: $5,000
for adults and $2,500 for kids. Pets are free.
He said the Portland, Ore., company that owns
the Barstow property, TSG Investments, gave him
permission to convert it. The land once belonged
to AT&T and was originally used as an emergency
government communications center during the Cold
War.
The Los Angeles Times toured the bunker, promising
not to reveal the location because Vicino said
he didn't want freeloaders trying to get in if
disaster strikes.
The Times found a giant open area with anemic
blue walls and a 3,000-pound door. Vicino said
he hasn't raised enough money to start renovating
but claims the place is already protected from
electromagnetic pulses that could destroy electrical
equipment.
Steve Kramer, a 55-year-old respiratory therapist
from San Pedro, said he paid $12,500 to reserve
spots for him and his family. He's stocking up
on dried food and teaching his 12-year-old son
to ride a dirt bike in case they have to go off-road
to get to the desert bunker.
"We're not crazy people, but these are fearful
times," Kramer said. |