Architecture of doom: DIY planning for global catastrophe

Discussion of survival retreat design focuses on issues such as strategic location, energy self-sufficiency, water supply, waste treatment, food production, and home security.

Survivalists and preppers spend a lot of time arguing over the virtues of stainless steel versus plastic water drums, the best way to fortify a house, whether to use a passive solar heater or wood stove, and what size basement is required for all that canned food.

The effect is something like Swiss Family Robinsonwith methane-harvesting septic systems and electrified fences. It is the wilder examples of survival retreat design that tend to catch our eye.

Rawles sees the “crushroom” (a kind of foyer “mantrap”) as a key element of retreat architecture. One Doomsday Prepper episode featured a family who, fearing the fallout from a nuclear event, retreated to a replica medieval castle (and gained their own TV series, Doomsday Castle).

Survivalists can easily be caricatured as lonely lunatics sitting on piles of freeze-dried food and exotic armaments in their foil-lined bunkers. The typical TV survivalist rhetoric also suggests an intense pessimism about the future.

The New York Times critic Neil Genzlinger bemoanedin 2012 “how offensively anti-life these shows are, full of contempt for humankind”.

But is Doomsday Preppers simply a freakish version of Grand Designs? Is there something other than voyeuristic smirking to be gained from watching?

DIY gone wild
Anthropologist Richard G. Mitchell’s Dancing at Armageddon(2001) is, I think, one of the most level-headed studies of survivalist culture. His work points to the way survivalism is rarely about extremist action. Rather, it is more often about tinkering with tools, exchanging ideas, and creative storytelling.

We can see the design of the survival retreat as a wilder version of the more familiar impulse towards DIY and home renovation.

Survivalists use these projects as a focus for developing the personal skills, knowledge, and praxis needed to embrace a radically changing world. Potential chaos and crisis are embraced as the opportunity for developing personal autonomy.

Seen in this way — and put in the context of global climate change, ongoing financial crises, and episodes such as the current Ebola epidemic — the survival retreat starts to seem to be an eccentric but understandable reaction.

Going further, survivalists may be more connected to the chaos of modern life many of us experience than their reputation suggests. Discussions about the need for developing personal “resilience” in communities facing the effects of climate change often resonate with survivalist concerns. Preppers start to seem prescient rather than loopy.

The new survivalism
In fact, something like the survivalist dream has become a compelling vision of sustainable future living. Environmental concerns, rising power prices, and the progress in alternative technologies have seen a growing number of people opting to disconnect and live “off grid.”

This trend often shares a common picture of the ideal retreat; including, for instance, micro-hydro power, methane digester, water tanks, passive solar design, and a vegetable garden.

Rawles has suggestedthat his SurvivalBlog has “an increasing number of stridently green and left-of-center readers”. Off grid housing is even being talked of as the “new normal.”

This can be read as liberating moves towards sustainability, personal, autonomy and self-determination. Survivalists also tend to privilege privatized, self-regulated, individualist modes of living.

The Australian off-grid advocate Michael Mobbs has recently suggested rethinking the state’s responsibility for sewage. He argues that “mature citizens” should take care of their own waste.

If it becomes the “new normal,” what could this sort of thinking mean for the way we live together?

Common services and cooperative social institutions have helped form the city as a public good. When looking at the overlapping discussions of being “prepped” and “off grid,” or “resilient” and “sustainable,” we should perhaps be wary. Who has the capacity to be off grid and who remains dependent?

Exit from the grid challenges the collective infrastructures that have been so vital to more equitable urban environments. What, then, of our public networks such as water, electricity, transport, and telecommunications?

What of our common urban future?

Lee Stickells is Associate professor at University of Sydney. This storyis published courtesy of The Conversation(under Creative Commons-Attribution/No derivatives).