NoTrespassing said:
Hi All,
I've been living in a manufactured home for over ten years now. We have no basement and no safe place to take shelter during a storm here in central Illinois. I want to build a cheap effective tornado shelter. I have a bunch of large fence posts left over from a fence project along with a tractor and post hole digger. I'm thinking about sinking a bunch of fence posts in the ground and making a small building out of them and then burying the whole thing. I need to figure out how to keep water out and vent it. Do you think my idea could work?
Kevin
When I read your post, I immediately thought of the traditional root cellar, which has been constructed from necessity since the beginning of time until recently.
Growing up with a root cellar (without a doubt the scariest place on earth for a kid),
Anytime the storms would roll in, we would head to the root cellar. Of course I wasn't worried about a tornado, I was more concerned with the spiders and the supposed 8' long snake my older sister swore lived there. Probably the worst was if ma told me - the 6 year old kid to go to the root cellar for something, by myself. YIKES. Oh the memories.
So I thought it would be an interesting topic to research. People have built cellars from whatever natural resources they had available. Do a google image search, and you will see what I mean. Quite fascinating.
You could use wood, although I don't think it would last long, if it held at all. One interesting thought, we have a concrete products plant a few miles from here. Their yard is FULL of reject boxes. Some of appropriate size for a storm shelter. One of the articles I read, this is what they used and basically got it for free, just had to pay to have it transported.
Here is an image that I found showing wood construction. Obviously it's not a root caller (or storm shelter). I wanted you to see this to show how the wood you have could be used to construct your shelter.
Good luck with your project.