![]() ![]() The basics of survival at the bottom of the psychologist Abraham Maslow's 1943 hierarchy-of-needs pyramid-food, water, shelter and security-are relatively easy to provide for over a short-term lock-in. It's not that difficult to imagine living underground in an environment that can sustain life, technically. When the event passes, residents expect to be able to re-emerge into the post-apocalyptic world to rebuild. Hall bought the 197-foot-deep silo for $300,000 in 2008, and transformed it into a 15-story luxury bolt-hole, where a community of up to 75 individuals can weather a maximum of five years during a doomsday event. An ex-government contractor, property developer and doomsday prepper with a master's degree in business, he first planned to build a data center in a silo, but quickly realized there was another, emerging market in doomsday prepping for the super-rich. ![]() But his is arguably the most gobsmacking. ![]() Larry Hall wasn't the first to reuse one of these Cold War relics. ![]()
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