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#missile – @fuckyeahabandonedplaces on Tumblr
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FuckYeah AbandonedPlaces

@fuckyeahabandonedplaces / fuckyeahabandonedplaces.tumblr.com

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Via Flickr: This is the largest single space in the Titan I complex, a room 130 feet across and sixty feet high - all buried underground. In here were the complex's four diesel generators, capable of powering the whole site for weeks without resupply if the 'button-up' order was given. This massive space also held water filtration equipment, transformer banks, and HVAC equipment. The tunnel to the left on the mezzanine level leads to the air shafts and their enormous intake fan; the right side tunnel leads to the diesel and water storage tanks. Unlike later US missile silos, these complexes were essentially small, self-sufficient cities. 180° panorama, stitched from 12 individual frames and merged in PS.

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Via Flickr: Constructed by the Army in early 1965 in response to the Cuban Missile Crisis. This was the Integrated Fire Control (IFC) Facility for the Nike Missile site titled HM-95 D/2/52. This Nike site was the radar communications and control facility where they did targeting and fire control, and the other site (now the Krome Avenue Detention Center) was the Launcher area with the actual missile sheds/silos. Tried to focus on the building structures rather than the graffitti, a near impossible task.

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