(Dark interior. 60 second exposure lit with primarily LED panels.)
Many feet below the surface staring at the blast lock doors inside a Titan I Intercontinental Ballistic Missile site in California.
(Dark interior. 60 second exposure lit with primarily LED panels.)
Many feet below the surface staring at the blast lock doors inside a Titan I Intercontinental Ballistic Missile site in California.
100 feet below the surface, inside a pitch dark Titan I ICBM Missile Silo, looking through a blast lock door.
These doors protected the complex from an explosion inside the silo or an attack on the silo. Each of the silos was separated from the complex by 2 blast lock doors. You can see the second set in the background of this image.
The Titan I ICBM Beale 851-C Power Plant.
Looking across into the Launch Silo No.3 of the Beale 851-C Titan I Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Base in Northern California.
During the operating years, 1962 - 1965, this silo would have contained a crib structure that would have supported the missile. These days, this base sits empty collecting dust, waiting to be purchased.
Tunnel Junction, Launch Equipment Terminal - Beale 851-C Missile Base, Chico
It's hard to describe the feeling I had when I took my first breath of the stale air inside the Titan Missile Silo. It brought back many memories of other locations that smelled very similar; stale, damp and toxic.
For the rest of the 8 hour shoot, I wore a respirator, which drove me crazy, but in the end it didn't matter because there's something so peaceful and relaxing about wandering around places like this, which I'm sure that seems so strange to most of you. This location in particular was a place that was saturated with war, a location that terrorized many, but when I was here, it was a place of peace.
What is your happy place?
Portal elevator at the former Titan I Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Base (Beale 851-C) in Chico, California.
Looking into the no. 2 launch silo inside the Beale 851-C Titan I Missile Base
During the base's operation (1962-1965), the 165 foot deep launch silo would have contained a crib structure to support the 52 foot tall Titan I missile.