Safe Rooms

Protect your family with a safe room

Safe-at-home storm shelters are engineered to 250 mph wind forces and 100 mph missile impacts. With a safe room you can sleep peacefully during hurricane season knowing that you have a safe place to go in your home in the event of a hurricane.

You won’t have to spend days on the road during an evacuation, stuck in traffic, trying to find a place to stay that will take pets, losing time off from work, spending lots of money, getting stuck in long gas lines, and eating bad food at roadside restaurants.

A properly engineered safe room is structurally independent of the surrounding home, has adequate passive ventilation, and an armored in-swing door in case you have to climb out over a pile of debris.

A safe room can be built into the home for $4000-$6000 depending on the size. When you consider the total cost of an evacuation a safe room can pay for itself in one storm season. The best part about it is that you no longer have to suffer the anguishing debate of whether or not to evacuate. The evacuation decision usually has to be made a couple of days in advance of hurricane land fall and, of course, when you finally leave town, the storm often turns away or wasn’t as bad as the forecasters thought. And, of course, if you stay not everyone will agree with your decision. It’s really a no-win situation unless you have a safe room.

With a safe room you will have a safe place for your family, pets, and infirm dependents to go to on very short notice. No need to disrupt your life until the hurricane actually makes landfall and then only for a few hours. A safe room is also a great place to store valuables. The triple deadbolt armored door stops wind, missiles, and thieves.

FAQ

Can I attach an exterior storm shelter to my home?
The shelter seems small, won’t it be uncomfortable?
What about toilet facilities?
What else should I put in my storm shelter?
Do I need electricity or AC in the storm shelter?
If my house crashes down around my storm shelter, how do I get out?
My garage is full of stuff so how do I make space for a storm shelter?
I live in a flood zone. Where can I place my storm shelter?
We hardly ever have tornadoes, why build a shelter to withstand a tornado?
What if my home is substantially damaged and I’m trapped in my neighborhood by storm debris?
If my home is built to the new wind codes why do I need a storm shelter?
Am I safe riding out the storm in an interior room or closet?
How can a storm shelter effect the value of my home?
Is a building permit required?