
If another missile silo listing comes along, we’ll keep an eye out for a booming response. The couple set up a real estate company named 20th Century Castles and run it from their home in a decommissioned Atlas E missile site. The silo extends 140 feet into the earth, and is composed of eight levels: two levels are the control center, and the other six are dedicated to housing the missile and other equipment. While this York missile complex is under contract, Figueroa has already received a call from the owner of another Nebraska silo in the Lincoln area. A spruced-up space could work as an Airbnb rental, ultimate man cave, or a prepper paradise that’s ultrasecure. While it’s unclear what the next owner will do with the space, options abound. Now they live out of state and want to pass the project on to someone else who wants to burrow into a serious project.

The original owners purchased the property in 1998, inspired by fears of the impending Y2K crisis and the predicted malfunction of some computer systems prior to or at the beginning of the year 2000. The now-empty silo is 174 feet deep and 52 feet across, with reinforced concrete walls and two massive launch doors that weigh over 50 tons. There’s heat as well as a kitchen and dining area. The first level is “completely livable” with electricity, hot and cold running water, and a bath tub. The undergound dwelling features 1,256 square feet of space on each floor, although the lower level remains unfinished. The facility consists of a two-story underground residence, where crews lived 24/7, as well as the original command and control center, complete with the launch button. Watch: $275K Ohio House Comes With Jail Cells You see how much money they spent at the time, $17 million to $18 million on one site,” he says. “We were just amazed at the history of it, the effort it took to construct these.

Underground living quartersįor those who like to be prepared for an above-ground catastrophe, a heavily fortified underground bunker might be just the ticket.įigueroa sees the 2,500-square-foot space as a true bargain. The sites, whose purpose was to serve as a deterrent during the Cold War, were then decommissioned and ultimately sold to private owners.
The missile sites were constructed in the early 1960s and operational from 1962 through 1965. This missile site in the middle of Nebraska was just one of 12 around the state built in the 1960s. The missile was stored vertically in a “super-hardened silo” designed to withstand a nuclear attack. The underground complex once housed an Atlas-F missile.
