Manner out within the Kansas prairie, 140 ft under floor, a concrete-lined relic of Chilly Battle annihilation has obtained a literal — and metaphorical — coat of “recent paint all through.” It’s not being preserved as a museum or memorial. It’s being offered on Zillow.
Welcome to 1441 N. 260th Highway, Lincoln, Kan., now rebranded as Rolling Hills Missile Silo, as a result of nothing says “pastoral attraction” like 600 tons of 2-inch rebar wrapped round a void the place a thermonuclear intercontinental ballistic missile as soon as waited.
The property itemizing for the decommissioned Atlas F missile silo doubles as a brainstorming record for entrepreneurs: “occasion venue,” “artwork gallery,” “climate-controlled wine cellar,” “mushroom farm” and “probably the most insane Airbnb on the planet.” Additionally included: twin above-ground concrete pads, 75-ton blast doorways and an escape hatch for that “dramatic exit.” It’s much less dwelling than Bond starter package.
Studying the Zillow itemizing, one may ask: Why does such a construction exist in any respect? Why was this a lot metal and concrete poured into the prairie within the first place? The solutions are well-documented however absent right here.
These questions seem to belong to a time when choices had been made with slide guidelines and concern. Now, the long run is up for grabs. The property boasts a “non-public driveway” and underground temperatures between 54 and 62 levels Fahrenheit, described as “nature’s free HVAC.” At $520 per sq. foot, it’s “NOT your typical fixer higher” and is “ready to your imaginative and prescient.”
The itemizing hints solely obliquely on the unique navy function by noting the property is “a chunk of Chilly Battle historical past.” In fact, Atlas F silos weren’t simply bunkers. They had been constructed to allow the erasure of life at scale, to not shelter. The Atlas F program, deployed within the early Sixties, was a part of the USA’ first operational technology of ICBMs. Every missile web site — 12 in Kansas alone — was designed to deal with and ship a 4.5-megaton nuclear warhead to the opposite aspect of the world.
Not like earlier Atlas fashions, the F variant was saved vertically underground and was elevated to the floor on a hydraulic elevator for fueling and launch, the latter of which required 10 susceptible minutes. By 1965, the Atlas F system was retired, changed by faster-launched Minuteman missiles.
None of this exhibits up in the actual property itemizing. There’s no point out that the Atlas F warhead was greater than 250 occasions extra highly effective than the atomic bomb that the USA dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. No trace of the fear that surrounded these websites — solely the promise of limitless enterprise alternative. The advert appears to scream: Admire the feat of engineering! (However neglect the existential terror it embodied.) Marvel on the blast doorways! (However ignore how they recast unthinkable violence as routine.) Consider the Instagrammable images! (However don’t summon photographs of what nuclear bombs did to folks in Hiroshima and Nagasaki on Aug. 6 and 9, 1945.)
Potential patrons should signal a waiver earlier than getting into. Although the missile is gone, the positioning presumably has remaining hazards: Maybe a visitor may fall down a shaft engineered to deal with a nuclear detonation?
Beneath the novelty, nevertheless, lies a deeper reality: Missile silos aren’t impartial areas for artistic reuse. They’re monuments to a second in human historical past when extinction was first constructed into the structure of nationwide safety doctrines. Their means to be repurposed as luxurious bunkers isn’t just bonkers; it’s symptomatic of an lack of ability to reckon truthfully with inherited buildings of violence. That is nostalgia with out reminiscence, and fetishism with out context.
And it’s not merely retrospective.
At present, the USA has an estimated 1,770 deployed nuclear warheads, of which 400 are land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles. The logic that justified Atlas F — deterrence by means of the prospect of immediate retaliatory destruction — stays embedded in U.S. strategic doctrine. Missile silos aren’t simply Chilly Battle relics. They’re dwelling artifacts of a technique the USA and different nuclear-armed nations have but to relinquish.
One may argue that repurposing these websites is healthier than letting them rot. Possibly so. But when we’re going to inhabit these locations once more, if we’re going to reside within the shadow of their historical past, then we should deliver the reminiscence with us. We should carry ahead not simply the concrete, however the chilly calculus — and the human value.
Susan D’Agostino, a mathematician and science author, was the nuclear threat editor of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.