![]() ![]() RSS | Twitter | Facebook Part technology guide, part productivity tool, Lifehacker helps you organise your workday and maximise your playtime. ![]() About h1 Email tips or questions to the: Lifehacker Tips Box Phone: +61 2 8667 5444 How to contact our team.This post has been updated since its original publication. Prepare for the worst, get your family in the know, and be safe out there. I’d love to say we don’t need things like this in our homes any more, but the threat of nuclear war seems to be just as realistic as it was during the height of the Cold War. ![]() It’s hard to say how effective this type of shelter would really be during and after a blast - there are a lot of variables at play - but if it’s built in a basement as suggested, it should be fairly safe. Just be sure to stock it well with food, clean water, fresh clothes, and something you can use as a toilet. Once built, Walt says you can live in it comfortably for at least two weeks, which is probably plenty of time to avoid nuclear fallout (assuming the world hasn’t been completely blown to smithereens). To see what materials you’ll need and to help you follow along with the video, you can use this Family Fallout Shelter Bulletin that was released at the same time. The video, titled Walt Builds a Family Fallout Shelter, can be watched in full below thanks to the US National Archives YouTube channel: ![]()
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