Yours for £200,000: Nuclear bunker built for £30 MILLION in 1990 with its own hospital, workshop commercial kitchen and BBC recording studio goes on the market

Bunker on Cultybraggan Camp base, west of Dundee, Scotland, was designed to protect 150 people from nuclear war

It includes its own hospital and kitchen among the 49 rooms spread across two levels underground

It also features a BBC recording studio which would have been used to contact survivors on the outside


A nuclear bunker which cost the Government more than £30million to build and comes complete with a BBC recording studio is expected to sell for just £200,000.



The vast Cold War centre was built in 1990 on a former POW camp which once housed Nazi Rudolf Hess. It featured a built-in hospital, workshop, canteen, commercial kitchen and accommodation for 150.



But fortunately it was never needed and was sold off by the Ministry of Defence in 2007. It is now back on the market and is expected to sell for around £200,000 when it is auctioned off later this month.

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This former nuclear bunker just west of Dundee in Scotland has gone on sale for £200,000 and features 26,000sqft of accommodation

The hide-away has 49 rooms and was designed to house 150 people, but is in need of some tender loving care after a few decades without use

In order to help people survive the fallout from an atomic blast, the bunker is fitted with air filters, backup generators and water storage tanks

For slightly more than the average price of a British home, a survivalist would get around 26,000sq/ft of accommodation. Spread over two levels, there are 49 rooms with 27 of these on the top floor.



Lower down would have been the living quarters, which would have held 150 people along with the hospital. There are also an impressive array of life support systems, including air filtration plants, backup generators and water storage tanks.



And it boasts a BBC recording studio, which was installed so the government of the day could speak to the public in the event of a nuclear war. The property is located on the Historic Cultybraggan Camp, 28 miles west of Dundee in Scotland.



The bunker was fitted out to allow 150 officials to outlast nuclear warfare buried deep underground where radiation was less likely to affect them

While the property may make a poor home, it could easily be used for data storage as the design protects it from solar flares which can knock out sensitive computing equipment

The enormous bunker was supposed to be a regional survival hub and is split over two levels with 27 rooms on the top floor alone





Rudolf Hess, Hitler's number two, was held at the camp for one night in 1941 following his failed peace trip to Scotland. Cultybraggan nuclear bunker will be auctioned off on March 27 in Edinburgh by Future Property Auctions.



Darryl Cormack, head of corporate sales at the auction house, said: 'It is not the first bunker I have come across but it is pretty unusual. The most interesting thing is the BBC room, which would have been used to control what's aired post nuclear war.



The site was designed to provide shelter in the event of a nuclear disaster and even includes a BBC recording studio which would have been used to communicate with survivors

The cavernous interior of the bunker provides a chilling insight into what life might have been like for survivors of nuclear warfare as they cowered underground

'You'd be able to get on the radio and reassure the public there was still a government. I expect there to be a great deal of interest from people who like history but also for commercial reasons.



'It is ideal for data storage because sun flares can't penetrate the bunker. It's not small, it was a regional bunker and is massive and as it was one of the last built it is one of the most technologically advanced.'



