| |

Login to eHomeBuyers

Virtual
Tours
Featured Listings
Homes
For Sale
Townhomes/Condos
Land & Lots
REO Properties
Rental Property
Your Dream Home
Sell Your Home
Contact Jan

Relocation Package
FREE Market Analysis
Active Adult Services
Military Information
Relocation Center
School Reports
Home Hunting Guide
9 Seller Mistakes
Baby Boomer Articles

Personally Speaking
Testimonials
Active Adult Services
Buyers Assistance
Sellers Marketing Plan
First Time Buyers
REO Properties
Home Page
Colleagues
|
BACK TO RELOCATION CENTER
Military Index Economic
Impact Movies & Pictures
Fort Carson
NORAD Peterson
AFB Schriever AFB
USAFA
NORAD North American Aerospace Defense Command
The
main entrance to the complex is approximately one-third of a mile from
the North Portal via a tunnel which leads to a pair of steel Blast Doors
each weighing 25 tons. Behind the 25-ton blast doors is a steel building
complex built within a 4.5 acre grid of excavated chambers and tunnels
and surrounded by 2,000 feet of granite. The main excavation consists
of three chambers 45 feet wide, 60 feet high, and 588 feet long, intersected
by four chambers 32 feet wide, 56 feet high and 335 feet long. Fifteen
buildings, freestanding without contact with the rock walls or roofs and
joined by flexible vestibule connections, make up the inner complex. Twelve
of these buildings are three stories tall; the others are one and two
stories.
The outer shell of the buildings is made of three-eighths-inch continuously
welded low carbon steel plates which are supported by structural steel
frames. Metal walls and tunnels serve to attenuate electromagnetic pulse
(EMP). Metal doors at each building entrance serve as fire doors to help
contain fire and smoke. Emphasis on the design of the structure is predicated
on the effects of nuclear weapons; however, building design also makes
it possible for the complex to absorb the shock of earthquakes.
Blast Valves, installed in reinforced concrete bulkheads, have been placed
in the exhaust and air intake supply, as well as water, fuel, and sewer
lines. Sensors at the North and South Portal entrances will detect overpressure
waves from a nuclear explosion, causing the valves to close and protect
the complex. All of the buildings in the complex are mounted on 1,319
steel springs, each weighing approximately 1,000 pounds. The springs allow
the complex to move 12 inches in any one direction. To make the complex
self-sufficient, adequate space in the complex is devoted to support functions.
A dining facility, medical facility with dental office, pharmacy and a
two-bed ward; two physical fitness centers with exercise equipment and
sauna; a small base exchange, chapel, and barber shop are all located
within the complex.
Within the complex are all the utility systems necessary to make the facility
functional. The primary supply of electrical power is supplied by the
City of Colorado Springs. The secondary source or back-up power supply
is provided by six 1,750 kilowatt, 2,800 horse-powered diesel generators.

Water for the complex comes from an underground water supply inside Cheyenne
Mountain. Today, 30,000 to 120,000 gallons of water is deposited into
four excavated reservoirs. Three of these reservoirs serve as industrial
reservoirs and the remaining reservoir serves as the complex's primary
domestic water source. All four reservoirs have the capacity to store
1.5 million gallons of water.
Incoming air may be filtered through a system of chemical/biological/radiological
(CBR) filters to remove harmful germs and/or radioactive and chemical
particles. The fresh air intake is mainly from the south portal access
which is 17 ½ feet high and 15 feet wide and linked to the north portal
access which is 22 ½ feet high and 29 feet wide. The entire tunnel from
north to south entry portals is nine-tenths of a mile long.
Back to Norad Main
|
|
|