there where two air raid shelters one was the Morrison shelter which looked like a table the other was the Anderson shelter which was underground
During WW2 many Londoners slept on the platforms of London Underground stations. Basements of buildings were used as communal air raid shelters. Morrison shelters and Anderson shelters for individual families were also used.
metal
shelters are made of metal and plastic and you get a curved metal panel and join them together to make the roof and the sides of the shelter
Re-enforced concrete
Morrison shelters were made of iron.
Anderson shelters were made of corrugated iron and Morrison shelters were made from steel panels.
Of course his experiences in the underground shelters during World War 2.
Morrison shelters were used inside a householders home. Anderson shelters were designed to be used in the householders garden and there were various types of public shelters which were usually underground.
Morrison shelters were made from sheets of steel.
5,000 flood shelters were made in Bangladesh
They were shelters either underground or in your house or outside in your front or back garden. They were mostly made out of corrugated metal or iron for the roofs and usually metal for the walls and there were wooden stools/ seats/ bench's etc.. . and if a air raid went off they would probably stay in for a few hours.
Underground railroad
Anderson Shelters were about 4 feet or 1. 2 meters underground. They were cover with soil or concrete with one door to ingress and egress.
It was not safe enough for people to sleep up above in the cities during night due to the fact that a bomb could be dropped on the anytime, so the citizens of London had to sleep in The London Underground.
bomb shelters were made out of corigated iron with mud and grass covering it.
there where two air raid shelters one was the Morrison shelter which looked like a table the other was the Anderson shelter which was underground