Bunkers in
Albania, where around 750,000 of such constructions once dotted the
countryside.
[1]
A bunker is a defensive military fortification. Bunkers are mostly below ground, compared to blockhouses which are mostly above ground. They were used extensively in World
War I and World War II. During the Cold War,
massive bunker complexes were built to house both strategic (command & control) infrastructure as well as government
personnel and stores for the event of a nuclear war. During that time, bunkers became a
part of American culture with people building backyard fallout shelters, though these were not intended to
protect against direct attacks as bunkers normally would.
Types
Trench bunker
This type of bunker or blockhouse is a small concrete box, partly dug into the ground, which is usually a part
of a trench system. Such bunkers give the defending soldiers better protection than the open trench and also include top protection against aerial attack (grenades,
mortar shells). The front bunker of a trench
system usually includes machine guns or mortars and forms a dominant shooting post. The rear
bunkers are usually used as command posts or Tactical Operations Center (TOC), for
storage and as field hospitals to attend to wounded soldiers.
Many mines in France were transformed into bunkers by both the
Germans and the French in World War I and World War
II.
Pillbox
A WW2 pillbox on the shingle bank at
Kelling,
North
Norfolk, England, intended to repel German invaders.
A WW2 pillbox on the East coast of England (the railings are a modern feature).
Dug-in guard posts (with loopholes through which to fire guns) and made from concrete are also known as 'pillboxes'. The
originally jocular name arose from their perceived similarity to the cylindrical boxes in which medical pills were once
sold.[2] They are in effect a trench firing step hardened
to protect against small-arms fire and grenades and raised a little to improve the field of fire.
Their use seems to have developed during the period of the First World War when
defence in depth using the Machine Gun Corps
was being perfected. However, most of those seen in Britain, having been left over from the 1940 invasion scare, are designed for use by riflemen rather than for
machine gunners. The concrete nature of pillboxes means that they are a feature of prepared
positions and their original use is likely to have been in the Hindenburg Line. This is
likely to have been the time when they acquired their incongruous English name. The Oxford English Dictionary's earliest record of the use of the word pillbox in
connection with a defensive post is from 13 September 1917, after the German withdrawal onto the Hindenburg Line.
Pillboxes are often camouflaged in order to conceal their location and to
maximize the element of surprise. They may be part of a trench system, form an interlocking line of defence with other pillboxes
by providing covering fire to each other (defence in depth), or they may be placed to
guard strategic structures such as bridges and jetties.
Many pillboxes were built before WWII in the Czech Republic in defence against the
German invasion of Czechoslovakia. None of these were actually used in the end, since the German military met no resistance when
coming to the country.
Industrial bunker
Typical industrial bunkers include mining sites, food storage areas, dumps for materials, data storage, and sometimes living
quarters. They were built mainly by nations like Germany during World War II to protect important industries from
aerial bombardment.
Personal shelter
Experts in preparedness for war (such as Cresson Kearny, see below) recommend purchasing and stockpiling the materials for an
expedient blast or fallout shelter, and then constructing it only if war appears very
likely. In real wars, such materials almost immediately become unavailable as emergency construction depletes stocks. The storage
needed is modest, and the materials are inexpensive in peacetime, and easy to inspect and maintain.
When a house is purpose-built with a bunker, the normal location is a reinforced below-grade bathroom with large cabinets.
Today some vendors provide true bunkers engineered to provide good protection to individual families at modest cost. One
common design approach uses fiber-reinforced plastic shells. Compressive
protection may be provided by inexpensive earth arching. The overburden is designed to shield from radiation. To prevent the
shelter from floating to the surface in high groundwater, some designs have a skirt held-down with the overburden.
Design
Blast protection
Bunkers deflect the blast wave from nearby explosions to prevent ear and internal injuries
to people sheltering in the bunker. While frame buildings collapse from as little as 3 psi (0.2 bar) of overpressure, bunkers are regularly constructed to survive several hundred psi (over 10 bar). This
substantially decreases the likelihood that a bomb can harm the structure.
The basic plan is to provide a structure that is very strong in physical
compression. The most common purpose-built structure is a buried, steel reinforced
concrete vault or arch. Most expedient
(makeshift) blast shelters are civil engineering structures that contain large buried tubes or pipes such as sewage or rapid
transit tunnels. Improvised purpose-built blast shelters normally use earthen arches or vaults. To form these, a narrow (1-2
metre) flexible tent of thin wood is placed in a deep trench (usually the apex is below grade), and then covered with cloth or
plastic, and then covered with 1-2 meters of tamped earth.
A large ground shock can move the walls of a bunker several centimeters in a few milliseconds. Bunkers designed for large
ground shocks must have sprung internal buildings, hammocks, or bean-bag chairs to protect inhabitants from the walls and
floors.
Nuclear protection
Nuclear bunkers must also cope with the underpressure that lasts for several seconds after the shock wave passes, and block radiation. Usually these features are easy to
provide. The overburden (soil) and structure provide substantial radiation shielding, and the
negative pressure is usually only 1/3 of the overpressure.
General features
The doors must be at least as strong as the walls. The usual design is a trap-door, to minimize the size and expense. To
reduce the weight, the door is normally constructed of steel, with a fitted steel lintel and frame. Very thick wood also serves,
and is more resistant to fire because it chars rather than melts. If the door is on the surface and will be exposed to the blast
wave, the edge of the door is normally counter-sunk in the frame so that the blast wave or a reflection cannot lift the edge. A
bunker must have two doors. Normally one door is convenient, and the other is strong. Door shafts may double as ventilation
shafts to reduce digging.
In bunkers inhabited for prolonged periods, large amounts of ventilation
or air conditioning must be provided in order to prevent ill effects of heat. In
bunkers designed for war-time use, manually-operated ventilators must be provided because supplies of electricity or gas are
unreliable. One of the most efficient manual ventilator designs is the Kearny Air Pump.
Ventilation openings in a bunker must be protected by blast valves. A blast valve is closed
by a shock wave, but otherwise remains open. One form of expedient blast valve is tire-treads nailed or bolted to frames strong
enough to resist the maximum overpressure.
If a bunker is in a built-up area, it may have to include water-cooling or an immersion tub and breathing tubes to protect
inhabitants from fire storms.
Bunkers must also protect the inhabitants from normal weather, including rain, summer heat and winter cold. A normal form of
rainproofing is to place plastic film on the bunker's main structure before burying it. Thick (5-mil or 0.13 mm), inexpensive
polyethylene film serves quite well, because the overburden protects it from degradation by
wind and sunlight.
Famous installations
Famous bunkers include NORAD's underground facility at Cheyenne Mountain and the Canadian set of so-called Diefenbunkers. The Soviet Union maintained huge bunkers (one of the
secondary uses of the very deeply dug Moscow Subway system was as nuclear shelters), and in
Albania, Enver Hoxha dotted the country with hundreds of
thousands of bunkers. Dictators and potentates like Saddam Hussein often spend massive
sums building fortresses beneath their palaces. Osama bin Laden at one time was also
rumoured to be hiding in massive 'underground fortresses' in Tora Bora, though these would
only be natural features strengthened and extended to some degree.
See also
Beach bunker with improvised art in
Blåvand,
Denmark.
Wall painting on coastal World War II bunker, on the southern coast of
Tenerife.
General topics:
Specific bunkers:
- Bankstown Bunker, WWII bunker attended by Douglas MacArthur, now buried
under a public park & houses in Sydney Australia.
- Burlington, a city-sized bunker beneath Wiltshire
- Cheyenne Mountain, the underground base of NORAD
- Führerbunker, the Berlin bunker of
Adolf Hitler
- World War II line-type bunker systems
- Atlantic Wall, coasts of Western Europe, built by Nazi Germany during WWII
- GHQ Line, southern England, built by Great
Britain during WWII
- Maginot Line, eastern France, built by France,
pre-WWII
- Siegfried Line, western Germany, built by Germany during WWI and again
pre-WWII
- Taunton Stop Line, southwest England, built by Great Britain during WWII
References
- ^ Albania's
Chemical Cache Raises Fears About Others - Washington Post, Monday 10
January 2005, Page A01
- ^ Why Pillbox? - Hellis, John; an article from the Loopholes journal with further
references. Retrieved 2007-09-08.
External links
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