After I sold that 40 footer I was thinking about getting two 20’s, burying one and stacking the other on top of it. then it would be just a mater of building a staircase. They are easy to set up. you just have to poor a good concrete foundation for each corner. the center is self supporting.
Hmmm........ they're about 8 and a half feet wide & hide.
I didn't even think about stacking them. I thought about having them side by side and placing a workshop or garage on top so no one would notice.
The 2nd Amendment : Washington didn't use his right to free speech to defeat the British, he shot them.
Wish I had buried a container under my shop, but oh well!
If you plan on burying one of these, make sure to seal the outside to prevent corrosion.
The most likely reason for being in the thing around Houston is a hurrican and I would check your elevation. It is likely to flood being underground... A force 5 hurrican can put 20' of surge tide into downtown Houston according to the models.
Per the TSARP map that I just looked at Im in Zone x (area of lowest risk) but only about a block or two away from a 0.2% floodplain (500 year ).
No issue, just instant swimming pool!!!
No matter what you plan on putting in the earth, gotta make sure it is well sealed to the soil, proper sump, etc, etc... Would need to make a pent roof on top of a container, the flat would buckle under a soil load, make a foam core and concrete on top of that.
Bunkers are great for natural disasters; however, if your plans include 'shtf" you better plan on fighting positions to protect the bunker. Or someone outside will be able to easily convince you to join them.
Im cooking the thoughts on how to conceal the external parts to avoid detection in a SHTF. In that type of situation the plan is for the room in the ground is to keep me and mine safe just long enough to execute the escape to a less populated area. I still have fresh in my mind the nightmare of being stuck for 8 hrs on I-10 during the mass evacutaion during Rita. That is something that I will never fall for again. This way I figure I can hold out on my own enough to see what the sheople do and whatever the threat that is causing the SHTF and adjust acordingly.
I live in a forested area so I could bury a conex container in the woods and any sign of it would vanish quickly. However there would be noticeable things also. Although the vents would get overgrown; however, the trail to it would stick out. Cooking smells are noticed also.
However, for a hurricane, tornado etc type event a bunker would be a good thing to have.. As hurricanes usually bring a lot of rain I'd consider how to keep it from being flooded also.
AFA the unlikely SHTF events; a bunker's value would depend on if anyone finds it. If found a buried container with one entrance and no firing slits isn't a good thing.
As there isn't anything here I live so I can stay in the house and adjust accordingly.
Was reading a post about bunkers the other day, don't recall where but the idea of using a steel corrugated culvert was brought up. A 6' or 8' diameter culver is fairly cheap. IIRC the thread had a link to a company in Utah or maybe Nevada that makes the and ships to your site. I'll see if I can find it.
Here it is.
http://utahsheltersystems.com/office_faq.php
Last edited by Richard Simmons; 08-07-2010 at 05:30 PM.
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•" We sleep safe in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm. " George Orwell
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