A North Carolina realtor went on an underground voyage after discovering an atomic bomb shelter in the garden of a house that was on the market.
Zachary Hooper, 27, was showing a property near Charlotte last month when he spotted the shelter which, according to the sign on the front, was constructed back in 1950.
So he went back the following day with a contractor friend who “has been down a few bunkers before”, with the aim of descending into the tunnels which, according to the listing agent, the owners of the house had not set foot inside in over 10 years of living there.
Zachary descended into the shelter through the hatch, to a depth he estimated to be around 30 feet, down two sets of ladders in narrow shafts.
Having intended to video his descent, he soon abandoned the idea because the darkness made it impossible to film, instead switching to flash photography.
Zachary and his friend stumbled across a couple more hatches, one at the very end of the corridor accessed by a ladder and another off to one side served by a sort of spiral staircase.
“We tried to touch as little as possible since the cave was just crumbling around us,” he said.
What the pair did find though were some very old soda bottles, a tank presumably for water and, somewhat disconcertingly, a fake rose in a terracotta pot.
On his way out, when his friend had already exited the chamber, Zachary took a moment to switch off his light and “experience the full darkness”.
“And the sense of … something being down there with you. Waiting for your lights to turn off.”
After that, it was time to leave.
“We had an audience waiting for us when we got out,” Zachary said. “Apparently another agent came to show the property to a family and everyone stayed to hear about it.
“Overall, 10/10, f***ing awesome. Definitely sketchy.
“But I would probably rather die in an atomic blast than be stuck down there for longer than a half hour.”