From the AP's Big Story:
Coby Cullins stands next to a scale model of the Vivos Shelter and
Resort during a tour of the facility in Atchison, Kan.,
Tuesday, June
18, 2013. A California man is creating what he calls the world's largest
private underground survivor shelter,
using a complex of limestone
caves dug more than 100 years ago beneath gently rolling hills
overlooking the Missouri River.
(AP Photo/Orlin Wagner
ATCHISON, Kan. (AP) — After most of the world's population is wiped off the map by a wayward meteorite or hail of nuclear missiles, the survival of the human race might just depend on a few thousand people huddled in recreational vehicles deep in the bowels of an eastern Kansas mine.
That's the vision of a California man who is creating what he calls the world's largest private underground survivor shelter, using a complex of limestone caves dug more than 100 years ago beneath gently rolling hills overlooking the Missouri River.
"I do believe I am on a mission and doing a spiritual thing," said Robert Vicino, who has purchased a large portion of the former U.S. Army storage facility on the southeast edge of Atchison, about 50 miles northwest of Kansas City, Mo. "We will certainly be part of the genesis."
Before it comes time to ride out Armageddon or a deadly global pandemic, though, Vicino says the Vivos Survival Shelter and Resort will be a fun place for members to take vacations and learn assorted survival skills to prepare them for whatever world-changing catastrophe awaits....MORE