Quick note: Though you may have read about this property before, most articles have simply reprinted the same stock real estate photos over and over. As always, all pictures are my own work, and I don’t think you’ll find a tour like this anywhere else.

When you first see it in the distance, you wouldn’t think it anything other than a picturesque home in the Adirondacks:

01

But this house has a secret.

02

As you head for the door, chopped wood piled high around the porch almost invites you in to warm up over a roaring fire.

03

Inside, the spacious living room is indeed a cozy place to escape the winter’s cold…

05

…with enormous windows offering breathtaking views of the surrounding Saranac Valley:

08

Just about the last thing you’d notice is this door:

09

After all, it seems like nothing other than a closet, or maybe a door to the basement. But if you were to try the door, you’d find it locked.

10

It’s about then you might notice the keypad on the wall beside the door, and perhaps become curious about what was on the other side. If you were to enter the correct keycode, the door would swing open…

11

…revealing a long staircase surrounded by cement walls…

12

…leading to a 2,000 pound steel blast door:

13

Why would you need a 2,000 pound steel blast door in the middle of the Adirondacks?

Because this particular house was built on the site of a 9-story Cold War-era Atlas F underground missile launch site – and it’s still there:

15a

Backstory: I was in upstate New York over Christmas break when I read an article in the local paper about a man who had purchased a decommissioned 1960’s missile launch site in 1995, built a few houses and an airstrip on the property, and was now looking to sell it ($750k and it’s yours! click here!), or perhaps lease it for film production use.

I. HAD. TO. SEE. THIS. PLACE.

I immediately contacted the owners, who graciously provided me with a tour which I am thrilled to present below.

14

There are not one but two blast doors at the entrance to the facility:

15

Here, you find yourself at the top of a cement staircase, which takes you to both the missile launch control room and the 9-story silo:

17

Our first stop was the former launch control room, which has been renovated by the owners into a multi-story living space.

18

Back in the 1960’s, this would have been filled with computers used to launch and guide an intercontinental ballistic missile armed with a nuclear warhead in the event of, well, Armageddon ala Dr. Strangelove. Hundreds of such launch sites were built throughout the United States, including 12 Atlas F facilities in the Plattsburgh area.

19

To get a sense of where we are in the facility, here’s a schematic of the launch control center (we entered down that long staircase, passed through the blast doors, and continued into launch control):

19d

See the tube marked Escape Hatch? The original escape hatch is still there to this day, and actually was one of the easiest ways of loading building materials in and out of the complex during renovations:

20

But of course, the real question is: what did the missile launch computer look like? Here it is, courtesy of the insanely informative SiloWorld.net site.

21a
Picture courtesy of SiloWorld.net – Click for more about US Missile Silos!

That’s an actual Atlas-F Launch Control Center pictured above. While skimming through the 537 page Atlas base instruction manual (of course there was a manual! Click here to read it – 29mb PDF), I came across a schematic of the computer layout complete with labels. I’m not exactly sure which one is the launch button – click below for a much larger picture:

21ab

I’m curious if this phone was also involved – it looks like you’d insert a key to “Commit.”

22c

Meanwhile, this is the countdown monitor panel, located on one of the banks of computers in the background of the picture above:

22b

A facility like this cost around $18,000,000 in 1958, nearly $400,000,000 in today’s dollars. And yet by the mid-1960’s, all of the Atlas facilities were decommissioned, rendered obsolete by the next generation Titan II rocket (and later, the Nuclear Arms treaty). In fact, this particular silo, which opened in 1962 and closed in 1965, was never even equipped with a missile.

missile1

Sadly, the military ripped out anything of proprietary value from the launch control and silo, including the computers. A lot of cool ornamentation remains though, like these original lighting fixtures:

22d

I’m not sure why, but circular rooms centered around enormous cement columns have such a definitive retro-by-way-of-1950’s-futurism feel:

19c

A winding staircase was installed by the new owners…

23

…taking you to an additional room below…

24

…complete with a marble bathroom!

25

But now for the good stuff: the silo. We continued down the main staircase to the bottom floor:

26

From there, we passed through another enormous steel door…

27

…into a tube-shaped hallway…

28

Reverse on the door: these doors would all be latched shut in the event of a launch:

30

We continued through yet another huge door…

31

Beside it, cables connecting the launch control room to the silo would have passed through these openings:

32

The mesh floor, now rusted with age:

33

One final steel door…

34

And then we were in the missile silo:

35

The missile would have originally sat in the space beyond the railing…

35a

…and man is that a drop!

37

The silo would have of course looked completely different during its operating days:

38a

Something like this today…

38b

…would have looked like this in the 1960’s:

38c

So what happened to the facility after it was decommissioned? Incredibly, the entire complex was flooded with water. This was actually standard government policy for decommissioned silos, as it was a surefire way to prevent trespassing. Also, according to one person I spoke with, the area around this particular silo was quite a bit more rough and tumble during the 1960’s due to a local mining operation, and there was concern that bodies might end up ditched in the silo.

This is one of many pipes that brought in water from the nearby Saranac river:

39

It took months and months to pump out the water, and it was actually in pretty good condition when it first came out. In fact, a bunch of silos remain flooded to this day, and you can actually scuba dive in some!

38

The missile was held in a “crib,” which would have raised it up for launch through a pair of doors at ground level. Those doors have since been sealed…

40

However, if you go above the silo…

41

…there’s still a vent over where the missile would have risen up:

42

One very cool artifact remains from this process…

43

The enormous hardware which would have opened the silo doors:

44

Below, a schematic showing how it functioned:

44a

Another cool relic from the silo’s operating days…

46

The entire missile crib apparatus was attached to enormous shocks, which were intended to absorb the kick-back of a rocket taking off:

47

The springs pictured above attach to enormous crib supports mounted on the walls:

48

Today, it’s a bit difficult to get from level to level. A spiral staircase still runs up all nine levels…

50

However, the elevator is long gone:

51

Below, what the silo elevator would have looked like, with emergency breathing masks:

51a

It’s almost unbelievable to think that in just 50 years, this…

45a

…and this…

45b

…became this:

45

Maybe that’s a good thing, in a way.

Being located north of Albany, it’d be quite a commute for your average film crew to go that far from New York City for a film shoot. But for the right movie or TV show looking to spend days or weeks on location, this could be a dream location (ahemJamesBondahem). Not only do you get a beautiful mountain home and defunct missile silo…

52

There’s also an FAA approved 2,050-foot runway…

54

…acres and acres of woodland…

55

Gorgeous views…

57

And even a log cabin!

60

Just be sure to set up the Locations Department in this room:

61

Touring this place was really incredible, and I can’t thank the owners enough for allowing me access. For additional information and to get in contact, simply go to www.silohome.com.

I’ve been to pretty much everything, from abandoned castles to top of the line penthouses, but an Adirondacks vacation house built over a defunct Cold War-era missile silo? That’s something special.

complexes

-SCOUT

PS – This is from the beginning of the Atlas F Missile Site Instruction Manual – I love that a cute girl was used among the pictures to get you to STOP! on this page:

stop

PPS – Fore more info, pictures, and videos of missile silos, definitely check out:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  1. Meredith Marciano Avatar
    Meredith Marciano

    Wow, this makes me nervous just looking at it. Too many “bomb” drills done at school as a little kid in the 60’s. Gets my heart racing just thinking about it. It is really cool though, except I wouldn’t go down there! I can’t believe you can scuba in them too, that really freaks me out! BTW there was a really cool bomb shelter built into the side of a hill next to the fire station in Wilbaham MA as an example for the townspeople to see how to build their own. It got covered up in foliage since people stopped going to look at it in the 70’s, but I poked around last summer and took some pictures through the filthy windows. Inside were all the food products and toys of 1958, but the mannequins inside were a little disheveled. I just went by there last week and saw they destroyed it, cut the trees down in front of it and emptied it out. I can’t help thinking they saw me nosing around, opening the hatch etc. It was so untouched for years, I feel bad. But maybe they were planning on doing that anyway, I’ll never know.

  2. GCR Avatar
    GCR

    Ah yea my first kiss from the girl under her desk next to me,i told her man i’ll never get to kiss a girl before we get blown up,she met me later behind the baseball backstop 🙂

  3. Dick Murtaugh Avatar
    Dick Murtaugh

    now i know why deferiet/carthage ny felt so comfy during the late 40’s and 50’s. best place on earth.

  4. Howard Avatar
    Howard

    I’m going to buy a lottery ticket tonight. If I win, I’ll buy the place!

  5. M Avatar
  6. Amanda Avatar
    Amanda

    Hey Scout!

    This location is being covered on CBS Sunday Morning in a couple minutes. Maybe they read your blog too!

    1. Amanda Avatar
      Amanda

      Oh, no! It was a silo in the midwest being turned into condos. My mistake!

  7. TJ Marz Avatar
    TJ Marz

    I have known about and have studied this particular property for a number of years now. I must say that this by far the most detailed and most accuracte depiction that I have run across to date. You have done an outstanding job. The use of the pictures as a slide-show type presentation is more powerful than the use of video. Also you concentrated on the “good stuff” which is the silo where as most approaches are from a Real Estate Sales person trying to sell a luxury home perspective. I believe the owners are asking $750K just for the silohome and all other properties are “extra” bringing the entire package upwards of $1.8 Million. My prediction is that this will sell by the end of 2012. Not because of the Mayan calender but because America may be going on another 4 years without a president. -TJ

  8. larry Avatar
    larry

    codes require living/sleeping rooms to have windows etc.

  9. gary Avatar
    gary

    I live in this area.
    As a very young guy I worked on the perimeter lighting(for the 24 hr work schedule)

    Picked beautiful jewel stones off the bottoms of the several I was involved with.
    A note about the computers- there were two whole floors, with air conditioning to keep the Vacuum tubes cool — it could only tell the missile where it was in relation to the north star!!

    Later while working for the power company in Ellenburgh 3 am call out to that missile base. One leg of the three phase power was out so the missle ran through its –every-bodies desd procedure-
    as we drove up to the fence those giant doors opened lights were flashing and sirens wailing My heart still races as I can still picture it. The Officer in charge calmed us and after we corrected the power problem gave us the grand tour.
    When you opened that escape hatch many tons of fine sand filled the tube as protection to the occupants came flooding into the interior/ VERY eerie/scary even after all these years!!

  10. big poop Avatar
    big poop

    even if you bought it for $1.00 ,Enviroment would step in and make the new owners clean it up. and that would be millions.

  11. Frosty Avatar
    Frosty

    Scout, thank you for an informative article. As an electrician, for the state of NY, in the 70’s, SUNY Plattsburgh had us going down into a few of the silos in the area. Prior to the college closing out their operations there, we had to go remove some of the cables the USAF left in there, and emergency generators. A slight correctionas well: the doors to that silo were 20 ton concrete slabs, and they opened in about 30 seconds or so. The missiles were lowered into the silo through those concrete doors. And the end of that runway is over those doors. (A friend of mine is the mechanic that works on the two planes of the owner of that facility. He couldn’t believe it the first time he went there.)

  12. Brenton Kinas Avatar
    Brenton Kinas

    Cool pics but where are all the pics of “Naked Guys” !!

  13. Jerry Murphy Avatar
    Jerry Murphy

    Frightening when you realize that aliens could have triggered these things like they did in England and Kansas…

  14. Tracey Avatar

    I want to film my next project there! Who do I contact?

    1. Scout Avatar

      Silohome.com

  15. Commander Tom Avatar

    Ground control to Major Tom, Lift off is counting down,
    10,
    09,
    08,
    07,
    06,
    05,
    04,
    03,
    02,
    01
    We have a lift off – All systems are a go and counting.

  16. DAIL HARRIS Avatar
    DAIL HARRIS

    I lived in one those 24 hours on duty, 24 hours off duty for 18 months in Altus OK area

  17. Kermit Avatar
    Kermit

    I worked for the FAA in that era but folks in our office didn’t have any information on such operations. kbk

  18. Bob K Avatar
    Bob K

    I was a 46350 during my 4 years, (USAF, ’64-’68).
    Our nukes were delivered horizontally, not vertical.

  19. AF11813235 Avatar
    AF11813235

    HOW Much JUST for the “HOUSE” or RENT???????????

  20. Dick Avatar
    Dick

    June–You are the most informed person to view this article. I, like you, cringe at the number of times people refer to concrete as cement! Even in many of the do it yourself programs the host refers to concrete as cement. How uninformed. Concrete is a mixture of sand, aggregate, cement, and water with cement being the glue that holds it all together. Good for you for knowing the truth.

    1. JTMM145 Avatar
      JTMM145

      WOW! I am so impressed by your vast knowledge regarding concrete. You must be a cement truck driver. Oh, I’m sorry, I meant a concrete truck driver.