Wednesday, August 17, 2011

The underground Nuclear Bunker at Kelvedon Hatch

"The time has now come to make all ready for you and your family in case an air charge happens" - protect and Survive (British Government data Broadcast).

The underground Nuclear Bunker in Kelvedon Hatch, Essex is an eerie but utterly compelling traveler attraction. It is de facto one of the most unusual locations in England and the legal road signs ironically pointing to a "Secret Nuclear Bunker" have achieved a degree of internet notoriety.

Nuclear Weapons

Imagine. It is 1961 and negotiations over the Soviet missiles in Cuba have irretrievably broken down. Deep under the Essex countryside, the communications nerve centre is monitoring the radio chatter... There are riots on the streets of Berlin, unconfirmed wire reports of Soviet tank armies sweeping across the central German plain. The sense of claustrophobia, of fear, is overwhelming. A helicopter swoops in and the Prime clergyman and War clergyman are bundled out. They enter the door of what appears to be a small, unprepossessing rural cottage. Neither man will see daylight again. Then the huge blast doors close for ever.

The underground Nuclear Bunker is located just over twenty five miles surface London. This is no sleek, American premise of the kind showcased in a hundred Hollywood movies (think Terminator Three for a up-to-date incarnation). Instead it is typically British - dingy, cramped and shockingly inadequate for the 600 soldiers, civil servants and Cabinet ministers who would have sought their final refuge here.

You enter the bunker through the portal of a tiny rural cottage. The only clue to the underground concealed within is a large radio mast that tops a grass mound. Make sure you pick up an audio guide for the tour at this point. Then pass the blast doors, consequent the narrow, long corridor and at last turn into a fully equipped communications hub. Here you will find rooms crammed with archaic switchboard technology, using a primitive version of the Internet on deep underground cables that would apparently survive an atomic blast. There is a fully equipped radio studio from which the Prime clergyman would address the nation. Beyond is a cavernous planning area where military meteorologists would monitor the fall-out and radiation as Soviet warheads obliterated Western cities.

Today the interior strikes the visitor as a interesting mix of Seventies and Eighties retro technology, bureaucratic pomposity and surreal, chilling effects such as dummies propped up in chairs. Look out for Margaret Thatcher and John Major wax dummies gracing the building. Around them, Tv screens playing traditional "Protect and Survive" communal service broadcasts are playing on continuous loop.

The videos are more chilling than any nightmare movie. They were only designed to be shown if a nuclear charge was deemed likely within 72 hours. If you had ever seen these programmes broadcast for real, then your own death would be virtually imminent. By this stage military planners assumed that Soviet tank armies would have overwhelmed Allied military in a short, approved war on the north German plain and escalation to atomic warfare would be the only remaining military option.

The films were produced in 1980 and cover the basics of survival: constructing a fall-out shelter, construction an inner refuge, hoarding enough drinking water and food for two weeks. Bring a child's teddy bear, and games, and books. Just hold on for two weeks.

The voice-over on your audio guide notes that the advice was futile. Everybody would die. The government broadcasts aimed simply to minimise chaos and anarchy in the days up to the attack, as ministers and generals hurried to their deep underground prisons. all within at least ten miles of ground zero would be totally incinerated. Unquenchable fires would rage a additional ten miles. leave was futile even before the nuclear winter set in.

In the second level of the bunker, there is a large room from which the Uk would be governed, with each grand department of state (Health, Transport) reduced to just a headboard and a merge of chairs. There are the small, dark bedrooms where the Prime clergyman and his Vip entourage would have slept. On the top floor, there is the eerie military hospital including operating tables, and cardboard coffins. Finally, walking through the accommodation blocks (staff would have rotated on shared bunks) you pass through to the canteen.

So why is this bunker such a fearsome and evocative place? No one ever died here. The base was decommissioned at the end of the Cold War in 1994 and ended up like an old wound in the English countryside. A underground personel bought the land.

Maybe it's because the fear of silent annihilation, of the threat of nuclear winter, has never left us and we still hear echoes in today's news reports of weapons of mass destructions and terrorist plots.

Leaving the bunker is easy. You just pass through a long silver tunnel and emerge, not into a land charred and blackened by atomic fall-out, but into the beautiful Essex forest. Fresh air has never felt so good.

(c) James Rozel 2009

The underground Nuclear Bunker at Kelvedon Hatch

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