A company is offering a a $40 million luxury doomsday bunker – complete with an art gallery.
Swiss developer Oppidum said their new fortified residence design – called Futurist – builds on previous luxury configurations.
As with existing design L’ Heritage, the underground property is built to survive apocalyptic scenarios, with self-contained energy and air supplies, blast protection, an airlock and a decontamination chamber featured, along with high-end living spaces.
There is a vault to store collections of art masterpieces, gold, cash and other valuables.
The modern underground layout is tailored to “the most powerful individuals in the world” and acts as a gallery to display and protect valuable fine art.
Wealthy clients can opt to have it built next to or under their existing residence, typically beneath the property’s garden or driveway space.
Oppidum said: “As with all new designs, Oppidum’s first priority is protecting what clients cherish most; loved ones and friends alongside precious invaluable objects ranging from the intrinsic to priceless.
“With the collection and preservation of fine art often a focal point for Oppidum clients, the Futurist serves many purposes.
“First, the Futurist protects clients while also preserving one-of-a-kind pieces in the setting of a modern art gallery underneath the home that can be accessed at any time easily only a few steps away.
“Oppidum also delivers the bank-level security of a vault in a special space specifically made for properly showcasing, lighting, and preserving each piece and objet d’art.”
Described as accessible to clients and guests but impregnable to the uninvited, Oppidum’s structures are “optimized for super-luxury everyday lifestyle, while prepared for all surface threats.”
Oppidum said their underground fortified residences start at a price point of $10 million but can build any secure living space imaginable designed to each client’s specific wants and needs.
The all-new Oppidum Futurist model will cost around $40 million, but the pricing is dependent on multiple factors such as location, size and fit.
Architect Marc Prigent designed Futurist by Oppidum with an emphasis on modernity. Celebrated for creating some of the world’s most luxurious interior spaces for renowned hoteliers, such as the Ritz-Carlton and Four Seasons, Prigent conceived the new Oppidum Futurist as a crisply streamlined modern art gallery and secure living space.
The company said: “Oppidum’s all-new Futurist serves as a modern-day castle with a pleasing, minimalist contemporary approach.
“The Futurist is defined by smooth shapes and delightful curving walls with a series of calming areas thoughtfully laced throughout.
“While Oppidum’s previous L’Heritage design is constructed in a classical French style, the Futurist opts for the modern; incorporating sophisticated lighting systems that delicately highlight day and night through each 24-hour period.”
Oppidum Founder & CEO Jakub Zamrazil adds: “The Oppidum Futurist presents contemporary, timeless luxury in a modern gallery setting.
“Fine art is such an important part of what inspires our clients. While protection and comfort are absolute necessities, Oppidum also recognizes that life is about much more than perfect security.
“The Oppidum Futurist serves as an extension of the home, a special place for showcasing and preserving precious pieces that the world cannot simply recreate.”
In the 1950s and 1960s many Americans built fallout shelters and bomb shelters in their backyards over their fear of a nuclear war. At one point professional American architects were engaged by civil defense experts to design such shelters— yet none of those structures had the luxury components of Oppidum.
Produced in association with SWNS Talker.