I know there was that film a few years back but I’ve never seen one. Are they common enough that dopers have either seen them or actually have them in their homes? Anyone?
Would you like to have one in your home?
I can’t imagine a situation where it would be preferable to shut myself in a room rather than run for the hills so I don’t think I’d have one.
My mother has one. She’s… a little on the paranoid survivalist side. Hers is specifically for sheltering Jews during the upcoming Second Holocaust instigated by the communists that are invading the country.
I think they’re interesting, but 1) I’m dead broke, and 2) that’s way too much like work to set one up and keep it maintained, and 3) even if I gave enough of a shit to try it out, I can’t ever get one because if she found out, she’d never leave me alone about it, and I have enough trouble dodging her crackpot theories as it is.
I think most people who have a panic room don’t have a room set aside for just that purpose. It’s usually going to be a modified bedroom. Just put in solid walls, a solid lockable door, security windows, a phone with its own power supply, and a gun if you want.
I’ve had one living overseas- basically a bedroom with a locking metal door, barred windows and some emergency supplies. I’ve known people who have had to use theirs when faced with angry mobs, robberies, etc.You don’t always get time to run.
Well, it depends partly on where in the house the panic room is (basement good, attic not so much) and how it’s constructed, but in a tornado I definitely would prefer to hide in a secure room than attempt a “run for the hills”.
I would have one if I could. But then I’ve got a psychopathic ex who wants me dead, so there’s more than the usual reason to dream.
Trouble is, I’m most likely to need it during the night, so putting it on the top floor makes the most sense. But then what if he sets the house on fire? And what use is it during bad weather? But if I have to get past the intruder to get into it the whole point is moot.
Nope, I don’t have a good answer. Besides, all my money is tied up in keeping him from getting time alone with our daughter. :sigh:
I have toured houses which had really nice ones, and my Dad’s old place had a less elaborate version. (basically just toughening of the walls in the Master bath/closet area,and some food storage.)
The best one had a dedicated solar cell to provide power, charging area for cell phones, etc. A stationary bike hooked up to create electricity and a faucet straight from the hot water heater (so, what 30 gallons of back-up water?). It also had a ladder which went down inside the wall and provided secret outside access through the garden shed/leanto. Trouble is, of course, that they were showing it all to everyone who toured the house. :smack:
When I was 11 or so, my family’s house caught fire. The house we ended up renting while ours was being rebuilt had a rather elaborate security system that had panic buttons in every room that tripped a silent alarm, some other stuff I didn’t really understand, and a room that had originally been designed as a panic room, but that had been converted to other uses. The entire system had been powered by an auxiliary generator, and while I don’t know the specifics, it had been designed more or less in parallel, so if one wire were to be cut, the rest of the system would still function. (We were later told that one of the developers or the original owners casually knew at least one of the Manson victims, hence the elaborate security.)
Most of the system had been dismantled by the time we moved in, but damn it was freaky.
And I think the idea behind it is less “getting in” and more “getting things out” in the case of the type of “panic” that you are describing. Other forms of “panic” (Debt Crisis, political opposition, home mortgage, the Jonses…) can also be handled this way, but that sort of thing tends to be frowned upon; most folks would rather you just cope or turn to drugs.