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GOING UNDERGROUND

Astonishing secret hidden inside building in the Essex countryside that looks like any other run-of-the-mill 1950s family home

Building nestled in woodland near Brentwood, appears to be nothing out of the ordinary

IT may look like a drab 1950s family house, but this building hides an astonishing past.

It’s home to a secret nuclear bunker built during the Cold War to house up to 600 people including the Prime Minister.

 From the outside this Essex property looks like any other drab 1950s home
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From the outside this Essex property looks like any other drab 1950s homeCredit: Alamy

The Kelvedon Hatch shelter, near Brentwood, Essex, boast bedrooms, a canteen and even an operating theatre.

It also has a Home Office radio room and ten foot thick reinforced concrete walls.

It’s open to the public after being decommissioned by the Government.

Owner Mike Parrish said: "The bunker was originally an RAF ROTOR Station.

 The secret nuclear bunker contains a Home Office radio room
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The secret nuclear bunker contains a Home Office radio roomCredit: Caters News Agency
 The astonishing facility in the Essex countryside is open to the public after being decommissioned by the Government
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 The astonishing facility in the Essex countryside is open to the public after being decommissioned by the GovernmentCredit: Caters News Agency
 The Kelvedon Hatch shelter boasts bedrooms and the capacity to house 600 people
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The Kelvedon Hatch shelter boasts bedrooms and the capacity to house 600 peopleCredit: Caters News Agency
 The walls inside the shelter are more than foot thick in order to withstand a nuclear blast
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The walls inside the shelter are more than foot thick in order to withstand a nuclear blastCredit: Caters News Agency
 A canteen would have provided meals for inhabitants had nuclear war broken out above ground
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A canteen would have provided meals for inhabitants had nuclear war broken out above groundCredit: Caters News Agency

"It then spent a brief period as a civil defence centre through to its most recent life as a Regional Government HQ.

"It was designed for up to 600 military and civilian personnel, possibly even the Prime Minister.

"It was hoped it would ensure the survival of the population in the awful aftermath of a nuclear war.

"There were spare bunk beds in the tunnel to help accommodate some of the hundreds of civilian and military personnel that would be stationed here in time of nuclear attack.

 The building was also used as a civil defence centre
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The building was also used as a civil defence centreCredit: Caters News Agency
 The shelter is now owned by Mike Parrish who has turned it into a museum
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The shelter is now owned by Mike Parrish who has turned it into a museumCredit: Caters News Agency
 The site was originally home to a radar air defence system used by the RAF
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The site was originally home to a radar air defence system used by the RAFCredit: Caters News Agency
 Facilities inside the bunker included an operating theatre
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Facilities inside the bunker included an operating theatreCredit: Caters News Agency

"The bunkers were costing up to three million pounds a year to keep on standby so we bought the bunker back in 1992."

It comes as a nuclear bunker hidden under a Lincolnshire filed went on the market for £20,000.


HOUSING A MYSTERY These houses all look normal from the outside… but each one hides an incredible secret


Used by the military as an observation post from 1963, it was decommissioned in 1991 before being bought by a private owner.

The shelter consists of an access shaft, former toilet block and store plus an observation room.

 Bunkers were costing the Government up to £3million pounds a year to keep on standby in the 1990s
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Bunkers were costing the Government up to £3million pounds a year to keep on standby in the 1990sCredit: Caters News Agency
 In its last incarnation before Mike bought it, the building was used as a regional Government HQ
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In its last incarnation before Mike bought it, the building was used as a regional Government HQCredit: Caters News Agency
 Corridors are lined by bunk beds that would be used in times of nuclear attack
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 Corridors are lined by bunk beds that would be used in times of nuclear attackCredit: Caters News Agency

In Camarthen, Wales, an abandoned bunker lies forgotten underneath a run-of-the-mill council car park.

The shelter boasts three rooms with a large map of the local area on one wall.

A similar shelter was recently discovered hidden under a Cornish mansion.

The shelter was pictured ahead of the redevelopment of the Grade II-listed building above.



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