| 
			  
			  
			
 
  by Tyler Durden
 June 14, 2015
 
			from
			
			ZeroHedge Website 
			
			Spanish 
			version
 
			  
			  
			Two months ago
			
			we went inside the FED's "doomsday" bunker:
			 
				
				a 135,000 square foot facility built 
				in 1969, and nestled inside Mount Pony, east of Culpeper, 
				Virginia that housed some $4 billion in hard currency as well as 
				the central hub of FedWire, the computer network which allows 
				the nation’s banks to communicate and transfer funds. 
				 
			It was meant to ensure that the US
			
			banking system could still function 
			in the event there were still any banks left in the post-apocalyptic 
			world, 
			
			Culpeper Switch (officially the Federal Reserve System’s 
			Communications and Records Center) was equipped with everything a
			
			FED official would need to survive in the wake of a nuclear 
			holocaust.    
			And yet, it was in a word, "spartan" 
			even by 1970s standards.    
			After all who wants to greet the 
			post-nuclear holocaust world surrounded by sterile plastic, a FED 
			spreadsheet (which caused the nuclear holocaust in the first place) 
			and all the cash in the world, especially since the only currency 
			accepted is silver, gold and of course, lead (not to mention a 
			bunker-full of voodoo economists).      
			 
			  
			  
			     
			     
			Then along came
			
			Vivos, a company 
			which specializes in creating the ultimate in luxurious Doomsday 
			bunkers which, however, are not only for the world's richest, but 
			also for those who Vivos founder, California entrepreneur 
			
			Robert 
			Vicino, deems worthy: 
			 
				
				anyone can apply for a spot in the 
			post-apocalypse world but only a select few will be admitted. 
				 
			Until recently, the company's only 
			community shelter product was Vivos Indiana, a shelter 
			"strategically located in Midwestern America", which the company 
			describes as, 
				
					
					"one of the most fortified, 
					nuclear hardened shelters within our network, located within 
					a one-day drive from anywhere in the Midwest and the Eastern 
					seaboard of America.    
					
					Built during the Cold War 
					to withstand a 20 megaton blast, within just a few miles, 
					this impervious underground complex accommodates up to 80 
					people, for a minimum of one year of fully autonomous 
					survival, without needing to return to the surface." 
				Like a very comfortable 4-Star 
				hotel, this massive shelter is tastefully and comfortably 
				furnished and decorated, completely outfitted, fully stocked 
				with, 
					
					food, toiletries, linens, 
					medical supplies, a one year supply of fuel, a deep water 
					well, NBC filtration systems, geothermal heating and 
					cooling, bedroom suites, full size showers and bathrooms, a 
					theater area, dining area, lounge area, exercise equipment, 
					kennels, a garden area for fresh vegetables, laundry area, 
					abundant storage areas, ATV's, bicycles, tools, a workshop, 
					security devices; and, just about everything else that may 
					be needed to ride out virtually any catastrophic event.
					 
				You only need to bring your personal 
				clothing and medications. We've thought of everything else!
				 
				  
				Far from any known nuclear targets, 
				this shelter is also strategically located a safe distance away 
				from 
				
				the New Madrid fault line, the Mississippi River, and all 
				oceans that might cause submersion as a result of a tsunami-type 
				event.    
				The site is also surrounded by 
				excellent farming, fishing, hunting and water resources. 
				 
			As the images and video below show, the 
			Vivos Indiana complex indeed has thought of not only every 
			contingency but presents it in utmost luxury.   
			Below is the video Vivos has created to 
			showcase its Genesis tour:             
			The company's marketing is solid, if 
			somewhat morbid: 
				
				The Vivos network of underground 
				shelters is very real.    
				Watch this above video tour of one 
				of the massive shelters built to withstand a 20 megaton blast 
				from just 2 miles. This is one of the smallest Vivos shelters, 
				with accommodations for just 80 people for up to one year of 
				autonomous underground survival.    
				The largest provides shelter for 
				over 2,000 people. At complete build out Vivos will save about 
				6,000 people - 1 in every 1 million people on Earth in these 
				impervious shelters.  
				  
				Something is coming. Vivos is 
				prepared for all of the predicted risks, whenever they may 
				occur. Vivos is the only co-ownership community shelter network 
				on the planet. Limited space is still available for those that 
				qualify.  
				  
				Members are now boarding. Don't be left on the other side of 
				the door! 
			Some more snapshots of the Indiana 
			facility:     
			
			     
			
			     
			
			     
			     
			
			 
			    
			Of course, greeing the post-doomsday sun 
			in a 5-star hotel is not cheap.  
			  
			Here is the price list from the 
			company's website:     
			
			 
			    
			Still, when it comes to billionaires, 
			$35,000 is a joke.    
			They would much rather spend a whole lot 
			more just to stand out among their equally showy peers.    
			It is for them, as well as for Europe's 
			billionaires, where should a Grexit indeed take place and things 
			quickly escalate, culminating in a way that nobody can anticipate, 
			that Vivos has just opened its second major ultra-luxury bunker:
			 
				
				Vivos Europa One, dubbed "The 
				Elite Shelter for the Privileged Few", which in addition to
				everything else 
				even has what Vivos calls the "only 
				private human DNA vault on Earth", which offers donors the 
				opportunity to collocate their DNA not in just one place but 
				two: in both the United States and Europe.  
					
					"Both deep underground shelters 
					offer virtually impervious protection in their hermetically 
					sealed vaults."  
			Whether stored for years, 
			decades or more than a century,  
			the Vivos Global Genome Vault 
			pool  
			will be a perpetual depository,
			 
			preserving life on Earth as we 
			know it.     
			Or rather, the DNA stored will be of 
			those billionaires who are not only rich but megalomaniacal enough 
			to believe they are worthy to be the template material of all future 
			humans. Which means all of them.    
			And speaking of
			
			everything else,
			 
			there is a lot.  
			  
			As the
			
			Mail reports, the Vivos Europa One shelter is located 
			
			in Rothenstein, Germany and is one of the most fortified and massive 
			underground survival shelters on Earth.    
			Its 6000 inhabitants can live up to a 
			year without leaving the luxury premises.      
			
			 
			    
			According to
			
			Forbes, the bunker was, 
				
				"originally built by the Soviets 
				during the Cold War, this shelter was a fortress for military 
				equipment and munitions.    
				After the DDR was merged with 
				Germany, the German government inherited this relic and intended 
				to use it for the same purpose of weapons storage.  
				  
				However, due 
				to a law prohibiting the storage of ammunition near a major 
				highway, the German Government soon realized they could not 
				continue with their plans and decided to auction this 76 acre 
				complex.    
				A wealthy investor purchased the 
				entire property, along with all of its improvements, both above 
				and below ground."  
			That investor was Vivos' founder 
			Robert Vicino whose "billionaire bunkers" are now on both 
			continents, and who says, 
				
				"We are proud to bring this epic 
				project forward in these increasingly dangerous times."   
			
			     
			The bunkers consists of a planned 
			survival complex that is comparable to billionaire's mega-yacht or 
			mansion - "but much bigger."    
			It boasts swimming pools, theaters, 
			gyms, restaurants, custom apartments, outdoor space and helicopter 
			service. And as one would expect, the bunker can withstand a nuclear 
			blast, chemical agents, earthquakes, tsunamis, or another disaster. 
			 
			  
			Unlike the Indiana complex where the cost is a relatively cheap 
			$35,000 one time charge for adults, the European price list is still 
			secret, although with the property valued at $1.1 billion, it is 
			likely that the final price will be much higher.  
			  
			Underground shelter 
			is currently in 'turnkey operational condition.'    
			Most importantly, in addition to paying 
			a lot of money for the privilege of reserving a key for the 
			luxurious doomsday bunker, residents will be accepted based on their 
			'skills' and 'talents.'  
			  
			It is unclear just which billionaire skills Vicinio deems critical for perpetuating humanity:  
				
				being a legendary 
			insider trader who pays off the government with Picasso painting, 
			being the world's greatest crony capitalist, creating a criminal 
			bank enterprise while scolding people for not being "rich enough", 
			and so forth. 
			Some more details: 
				
				the complex includes 
			over 21,108 square meters (227,904 square feet) of secured, blast 
			proof living areas and, an additional 4,079 square meters (43,906 
			square feet) of above-ground office and warehouse buildings, 
			including a train servicing depot.    
				The typical chamber area is 5 meters 
			wide (16.40 feet), by 6 meters tall (19.68 feet) and 85 meters 
			(278.87 feet) long.    
				Collectively there are over 5 kilometers (3.1 
			miles) of continuous tunnel chambers (equivalent to 71 Boeing 747’s 
			fuselages stretched end to end). All shelter areas are located 
			behind 3 separate nuclear blast and radiation proof vehicle 
			entrances, and a number of other passages for access by people only.
				   
				Each of the three main tunnel entrances 
			includes an outer security door system, followed by a 40 ton 
			hydraulic truck access door with hardened steel rods which expand 
			into the surrounding encasement, and a second set of massive steel 
			doors providing an airtight seal shut, protecting against chemical, 
			biological and gas intrusion.    
				The underground main traffic corridors 
			are large enough to allow mechanical transportation of heavy 
			equipment to almost any point within the complex.   
				Each family in the complex will be 
			provided with a private 2,500-square-foot apartment, which they can 
			design and build to their own specifications. They may decide to add 
			a pool, a theater or a deluxe bathroom. They will also have access 
			to a hospital area, several restaurants and a bakery.    
				Other common area amenities will include 
			roadways, a wine cellar, prayer rooms, classrooms, a television 
			station and a detention center.    
				Once each member’s private 
			accommodations are completed, furnished and fully outfitted, their 
			respective quarters will be locked and secured, limiting access to 
			their families and staff prior to lockdown; while Vivos will operate 
			and maintain all common areas (under and above-ground) pending a 
			catastrophic event.   
				Members will arrive at their own 
			discretion, prior to lockdown, landing their private planes at 
			nearby airports.    
				Vivos helicopters will then be deployed to 
			rendezvous with each member group, and safely fly them back to the 
			shelter compound, behind the sealed gates from the general public. 
			Members will then enter the shelter and access their private 
			quarters.    
				Each family will pay a base amount for 
			their respective living quarter’s area, along with their fair share 
			of the ongoing stand-by costs for operational management, staffing, 
			taxes, insurance, maintenance, utilities, and restocking as needed. 
			In short:  
				
				a complete turnkey operation 
			that every zombie in the post-apocalypse world will desperately try 
			to penetrate and feast on the inhabitants. 
			And now, without further ado, here is 
			how the world's richest will live in the real world version of the 
			Walking Dead: 
			      
			
			 
			
			With its rolling heels 
			and stunning woodland,  
			
			the village of Rothenstein looks like an 
			unlikely location for the bunker 
			  
			  
			  
			
			 
			
			The survival bunker can 
			apparently withstand a  
			
			nuclear blast, chemical agents, earthquakes, 
			tsunamis - and virtually any other disaster.  
			
			Above, this photo shows 
			a drive-thru blast-proof door at the complex,  
			
			which will likely be 
			available only to the super-rich. 
			  
			  
			  
			
			 
			
			The Rothenstein facility 
			also boasts 43,906 square feet of above-ground space.  
			
			Above, an 
			outdoor power station       
			
			 
			
			
			Vivos 
			Europa One shelter also features its own railway and helicopter 
			service,  
			
			
			 
			which picks up residents from nearby airports 
			      
			
			 
			
			Each family in the 
			complex will be provided  
			
			with a private 2,500-square-foot apartment.  
			
			Above, a personnel entry door 
			      
			
			 
			
			The luxury shelter was 
			originally built by the Soviets in the Cold War  
			
			as a fortress for 
			military equipment.  
			
			Above, its engine room. 
			      
			
			 
			
			Underground, the bunker 
			features countless tunnel chambers, 
			
			 each with their own security 
			system and blast-proof doors 
			      
			
			 
			
			The personnel entry 
			corridor inside the shelter contains an array  
			
			of white hard hats, 
			with steel pipes running across the ceiling 
			      
			
			 
			
			Water treatment plant: 
			 
			
			It also has its own self-contained water and power generation 
			system,  
			
			as well as climate and ventilation systems 
			      
			
			 
			
			This photo depicts 
			'typical living quarters' in the shelter.  
			
			It remains unclear how 
			much each family will have to pay 
			      
			
			 
			
			This photos shows a 
			bedroom in the Vivos Europa One shelter,  
			
			which is being dubbed the 
			world's 'ultimate doomsday escape' 
			      
			
			 
			
			A dining room in the 
			underground bunker  
			      
			
			 
			
			Residents can design and 
			build their apartments to their own specifications. 
			
			They may decide 
			to add a theater (pictured)  
			      
			
			 
			
			Other common area 
			amenities will include  
			
			roadways, a wine cellar and prayer rooms. 
			 
			
			Above, a theater  
			      
			
			 
			
			The complex features all 
			modern furnishings  
			      
			
			 
			
			Above, another living 
			quarters 
			      
			
			 
			
			Alongside its 
			catastrophe-proof features,  
			
			the bunker will include a collection of 
			zoological species and an artifact archive 
			      
			
			 
			
			Most importantly, the 
			bunker in Rothenstein boasts  
			
			227,904 square feet of blast-proof 
			living areas,  
			
			including this planned pub 
			  
			  
			    |