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Look Inside a US Cold War Nuclear Bunker Hidden Inside a Mountain


  • The NORAD Cheyenne Mountain Complex dates back to the height of the Cold War.
  • Initially meant for defense against long-range Soviet bombers, it now provides backup and training.
  • The self-sufficient facility is sealed by 23-ton doors and built to withstand nuclear attacks.

Deep inside a Colorado mountain lurks a remnant of the Cold War era.

Buried 2,000 feet beneath Cheyenne Mountain is a secret military complex, where 15 buildings can seal themselves off from the rest of the world within seconds in the event of a nuclear blast.

The complex is said to be designed to withstand a 30-megaton nuclear blast, per the Guardian, which is about 2,000 times as strong as the 15-kiloton bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima.

Construction on the complex, which is located about 10 miles from downtown Colorado Springs, began in 1961.

Today, the secretive underground complex remains functional as a backup command center for the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), a US-Canada binational organization that provides aerospace warning and control over North America, and the US Northern Command (USNORTHCOM).

Take a look inside.

The Cheyenne Mountain Complex is buried nearly half a mile deep into a solid granite mountain.


The granite mountain housing the complex is in Colorado Springs.

Thomas Nord/Shutterstock

Born out of the perceived need for a hardened command and control center in the US amid the height of the Cold War, the Cheyenne Mountain Complex was built deep into the Cheyenne Mountain, where solid granite naturally protects operations from outside threats.

The complex cost $142.4 million to build in the 1960s, or over $1.5 billion in today’s money.


Workmen survey building foundations in one of the chambers inside Cheyenne Mountain in Colorado Springs, Colo., April 5, 1963. The chambers will be the underground headquarters for the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD), the nation's nerve center for defense against neclear attack. Due for completion in 1965, the proposed 15 steel buildings will stand on rows of huge steel springs.

Over 693,000 tons of granite — or about twice the weight of the Empire State Building — were excavated out of Cheyenne Mountain to make way for the complex.

AP Photo

The complex cost $142.4 million in 1961, or approximately $1.6 billion in today’s dollars, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Construction began in 1961.

Over the five years it took to build, the 9,565-foot-high mountain was blasted, and more than 693,000 tons of granite were excavated to make way for the operations center.

The facility became fully operational in 1966 as NORAD’s Combat Operations Center.

During the Cold War, the complex continuously tracked potential Soviet missiles, bombers, or spacecraft.


The Command Post of the North American Air Defense (NORAD) Cheyenne Mountain Complex. Computer-generated images are projected on two large display screens.

The NORAD center was a central operations location during the Cold War.

NORAD

Throughout the following decades, the Cheyenne Mountain Complex housed operations for NORAD, the US Northern Command, the US Strategic Command, and the US Air Force Space Command.

Officers inside the mountain worked around the clock to track potential Soviet missile, bomber, and spacecraft launches.

Today, the center is still functional as a backup and training site.


A soldier walks into the mouth of the tunnel at Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station on May 10, 2018 in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Most of the NORAD and USNORTHCOM operations in the area today take place at Peterson Space Force Base in Colorado Springs.

RJ Sangosti/Denver Post via Getty Images

While the core of NORAD’s operations moved to the nearby Peterson Space Force Base in 2006, the Cheyenne Mountain Complex has remained operational as a backup and training facility.

Today, the complex is owned and operated by the US Space Force, with NORAD and USNORTHCOM using only 30% of the complex’s floor space and accounting for 5% of the daily population inside the mountain, according to the US Northern Command.

The mountain complex is entirely self-sufficient.


COLORADO SPRINGS, CO - MAY 10: A vehicle drives into the tunnel at Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station on May 10, 2018 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. NORAD is celebrating its 60th Anniversary at Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station.

The operations base counts on its own power and water supply, as well as air filtration and food storage.

RJ Sangosti/Denver Post via Getty Images

The complex spans over 5 acres inside the mountain across 15 underground buildings, and is entirely self-sufficient.

With over 6 million gallons of water stored in carved granite pools and 510,000 gallons of diesel, as well as efficient food storage and thorough air filtration systems, the complex is equipped to operate for weeks on end when sealed off from the outside world.

The complex is built to endure nuclear, electromagnetic, cyber, and biological attacks.


A group of media were allowed inside Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station as NORAD celebrates its 60th Anniversary on May 10, 2018 in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

The mountain complex is built to survive a bomb stronger than the one dropped on Hiroshima.

RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post/Getty Images

The Cheyenne Mountain Complex was built to survive nuclear attacks, but its facilities can also withstand electromagnetic bombs or solar destruction, chemical and biological attacks, and cyberterrorism.

Two 3-feet-thick, 23-ton blast doors seal off the complex from the outside world.


Two massive steel doors weighing 30 tons each are among the devices that will seal off the North American Air Defense Command's underground combat operations center in the event of an attack, shown Jan. 26, 1966. The doors, 26 inches thick, are installed in 17-feet thick reinforced concrete barriers in the tunnel leading go the defense command post inside Cheyenne Mountain, near Colorado Springs, Colo.

The blast doors were last closed on 9/11, without counting regular drills.

AP Photo

In the case of a threatening emergency, the complex is sealed off from the outside world in about 20 seconds by its 23-ton blast doors, which are 3 feet thick and built to endure nuclear shock waves in the case of a nearby explosion.

The doors, which are open during regular operations, will regularly close for drills.

The last time they closed outside drills was during the September 11 attacks in 2001, Wired reported in 2017.

The complex’s buildings are mounted on earthquake-resistant springs.


This Thursday, May 10, 2018 photo shows massive coil springs that support buildings inside the Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station complex near Colorado Springs, Colo. The springs are designed to absorb the shock of a nuclear explosion or earthquake. The springs are about 3 feet high and made from 3-inch-diameter steel. The U.S. military blasted tunnels out of Cheyenne Mountain in the 1960s for a command center for the North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, to protect it from nuclear attack. NORAD, a U.S.-Canada command that monitors the skies over both nations, is celebrating its 60th anniversary on May 12, 2018.

The steel coils supporting the buildings are designed to absorb seismic shocks in the event of an earthquake.

Dan Elliott/AP

The 15 buildings are mounted atop over 1,300 steel coils designed to absorb seismic shocks in the event of an earthquake or nuclear blast.

The springs hold the buildings 18 inches above the mountain’s rock base to ensure the safety of staff and equipment, per the US Space Force.

Inside the buildings, pipes are bendy to avoid bursts during potential ground movements, per Wired.

The complex is also home to the world’s “most secure Subway.”


North American Air Defense command Spacious cafeteria in NORAD is underground combat operation center. More than 900 meals are served daily to military and civilian workers inside Cheyenne Mountain. There is also a snack bar. Special permission was given for civilians to use military dining hall. It is 10 miles to the nearest Colorado Springs restaurant. Also inside mountain are facilities for sleeping 800 persons in emergency.

Staff also have access to regularly scheduled spin classes and a self-checkout convenience store.

Denver Post/Denver Post via Getty Images

Between 350 and 580 people work inside the complex every day, the Air & Space Forces Magazine reported in 2016.

The mountain complex also houses medical and other facilities for staff to use daily and in case of a “button-down scenario,” an emergency where the complex closes its doors.

The facilities include a regular clinic, a dentist, a self-checkout convenience store, and a chapel with a nondenominational chaplain.

The gym inside the facility, which transforms into a hospital in the case of an emergency, has regularly scheduled spin classes for those working inside the base.

A Subway located inside the complex, which feeds staff on a daily basis, prides itself on being the world’s “most secure Subway” location, per Wired’s reporting.

Today, government officials at the complex monitor the skies for nuclear threats.


A small group of media were allowed an inside look at the command center at Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station on May 10, 2018 in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Defense systems inside the mountain monitor for nuclear tests and missiles or spacecraft launches.

RJ Sangosti/Denver Post via Getty Images

Today, government officials working from the mountain complex monitor the skies for evidence of missiles or spacecraft launches, nuclear tests, and suspicious space behavior, among other concerns.

The command center also provides backup operations and training for NORAD and USNORTHCOM staff.

To keep communications within the center secure, no electronics connect to outside networks — which are also impossible to reach through the granite mountain — and officials use Defensive Cyber Operations to detect and stop attempts to infiltrate inside networks, Wired reported.

If the main NORAD and USNORTHCOM command post goes offline, the mountain complex can take over anytime.


Royal Canadian Air Force Colonel Travis Morehen, NORAD and USNORTHCOM Command Center Director, stands inside the command center inside Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station on May 10, 2018 in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

The Cheyenne Mountain Complex serves as an alternate command center for NORAD and USNORTHCOM.

RJ Sangosti/Denver Post via Getty Images

Aside from providing support and training to the Peterson Space Force Base operations, the Cheyenne Mountain Complex is also equipped to take over as a command center for NORAD and US Northern Command if the main command at the base goes offline during an emergency.

Inside, employees are often reminded of where they are and what they do.


sign inside cheyenne mountain complex

A sign near the complex’s power plant highlights the importance of the generators to the base.

United States Space Force/Staff Sgt. Andrew Lee

Signs like the one above remind employees inside the mountain center that power and personnel are what keep the operations running.

In the case of an emergency, staffers would be sheltered in the complex, but their families or others on the outside wouldn’t be allowed entry, a sacrifice that many of them keep in mind often.

In the Wired story, an officer told the reporter that in the case of an emergency, he told his family: “I’m going to be in the mountain doing my job… and I can’t help you.”

Employees at the complex regularly have “sleepover” drills where they practice leaving their world behind.

The complex is home to confidential communications … but also harmless jokes.


A small group of media were allowed an inside look at the command center at Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station on May 10, 2018 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. As a part of an on going joke the command center has stuffed alien doll in a jar placed in front of the director's desk.

Staffers at the Cheyenne Mountain Complex keep a stuffed alien doll on the director’s desk.

RJ Sangosti/Denver Post via Getty Images

Aside from the inherent heaviness of working inside a mountain bunker built to outlast nuclear destruction, staff pass their days doing their jobs and even keeping inside jokes alive, like the stuffed alien doll that staffers keep on the director’s desk.





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