I wonder if FEMA had any nifty hurricane plans. Incidentally, despite the 1960s vibe of this publication, it’s dated 1980 and some of the other designs were kept up to date until at least 1990, proving that cold warriors kept up the fight late in the game. To help you prepare for the possibility of Kim Jong Il interrupting your holiday party (assuming you’ve got “5 man-days”), I’ve posted a pdf of the plans for this bit of FEMA genius here. Incoming missles? Just fold down the snack bar’s false roof, toss in those cinder blocks and hunker down for a few weeks of endless martinis and canned cocktail wieners with five of your best friends. The snack bar should not take more than 5 man-days to construct.” In basements where the level of the outside ground is above the top of the canopy, adequate shelter from fallout radiation is provided for 6 people when the canopy is filled with 8″ solid concrete block or brick. Consisting of three units hinged to the back wall, the canopy can be lowered to rest on the snack bar in an emergency. “The principal feature of this shelter is a sturdy wood overhead canopy which serves as a part of a pre-built snack bar in a basement recreation room. But one plan really stood out for its cocktail era inventiveness, a basement “snack bar” that converts into the perfect place to ride out Armageddon. Most of these shelters were what you would expect, underground cinder block cubes accessed through a trap door on your back patio. Along with the text book and quizzes came a couple of plans for home built fallout shelters. Sometime back in the early 1990s I signed up for the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s free home study course in radiological emergency management.
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