Six places which could be safe if World War Three erupts – including two in UK

Fire and smoke rise into the sky after an Israeli attack on the Shahran oil depot on June 15, 2025
Fire and smoke rise into the sky after an Israeli attack on the Shahran oil depot on June 15, 2025 (Picture: Getty)

With the Doomsday Clock remaining extremely close to midnight and Donald Trump striking Iran after previously suggesting the US was on the verge of World War Three, tensions are extremely high across the globe.

Last year, Britain’s top general, General Sir Patrick Sanders, warned civilians could be conscripted to fight a war against Russia, saying the UK’s military is much ‘too small’ to handle such a conflict on its own.

General Sanders’ remarks come nearly two years after he said Britain was facing a ‘1937 moment’ – a reference to the two years preceding the Second World War.

If full-blown world conflict breaks out, AKA World War Three, there are several places across the globe which would probably be safe – two of which are located in the UK.

But don’t start packing your bags and planning to move into these options, as one of them is reserved for the prime minister.

Metro has taken a look at some of the safest places across the globe to hide out in case nuclear war erupts.

Wood Norton, Worcestershire

A view of Wood Norton, a stately home near Evesham, Worcestershire, which is home to the BBC Engineering Training Department, 25th May 1956. (Photo by Maeers/Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
You wouldn’t know there are storeys of underground bunkers below the Gloucestershire countryside (Picture: Maeers/Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

Wood Norton, a tunnel network running deep into the Worcestershire forest, is easy to miss from above ground. Only a small radio mast and security banner is visible from ground level.

Originally bought by the BBC at the beginning of World War Two, its initial purpose was to be a hidden base for the broadcaster in the event a crisis in London.

Wood Norton is now used as a training base for sound engineers and technical staff at the broadcasting company.

Its mast would continue broadcasting messages from the BBC if the UK were ever to go into crisis mode.

Also referred to as PAWN, Protected Area Wood Norton, the site boasts several storeys of architecture underground.

BBC documents released in 2016 revealed that the base would be utilised in the event of a grave attack on the UK.

The facility is reportedly able to house up 90 BBC staff – including 12 news editors and sub-editors – and is even equipped with a ping-pong table.

Pindar, London

Between September 2006 and April 2007, supported by Arts Council of England, I worked in a secure military location below ground in central London. At that time, the space, known as Pindar was the first port of call in any situation where the safety of the country is under threat. The Ministry of Defence allowed me an unprecedented level of access which has enabled observation of a live working space, continuously on standby, and fully prepared for the most extreme national emergency. The Last Things develops ideas about the institutions of government and the manifestations of power and, how the making visible these environments is intended as acts of democracy. These themes are addressed in my series The Commons (Velvet Press) and 28 Days. The Last Things was published by Dewi Lewis Publications as a 65 image monograph in 2007.
Entry to Pindar is behind a thick metal door (Picture: David Moore/The Last Things series)

Construction of Pindar began as the Cold War was drawing to a close, with the aim of ensuring the government could continue in the event of armageddon.

Much about Pindar is a closely guarded secret, but a few details were provided by then-armed forces minister Jeremy Hanley in the House of Commons two years after the facility opened in 1992.

He said: ‘The purpose of the Pindar joint operations centre is to provide the government with a protected crisis management facility.’

The complex is ‘manned by a permanent staff, which is augmented as necessary in times of crisis’, he added, and includes allocated space for ‘ministers, senior military and civilian personnel, plus service and civilian operational and support staff’.

Situated deep below the Ministry of Defence HQ, just north of the Houses of Parliament on the River Thames, Pindar contains enough beds, toilets and food to keep its inhabitants alive for as long as may be necessary.

It’s thought the facility can be accessed directly from Downing Street and other government buildings via a system of tunnels.

Peters Mountain, Virginia

A Project Office is located at, or inside, Peters Mountain in Charlottesville, Virginia. According to Albemarle County building permits issued to AT&T, the site underwent $61 million of updates in 2007
The Peters Mountain site is surrounded by dense woodland (Picture: USGS)

Peters Mountain, situated in the vast Appalachian Mountains, has beenused as an AT&T communications station for some time.

You can even see an AT&T logo painted on a helicopter landing pad.

It serves as one of several secret centres also known as AT&T project offices, which are essential for the US government’s continuity planning.

The centre can house a few hundred people, and according to Mr Graff, the bunker has received renovations costing $67 million in recent years.

He stated that if an attack on Washington were to occur, it would potentially be used as a relocation site for intelligence agencies.

Raven Rock Mountain Complex, Pennsylvania

RAVEN ROCK MOUNTAIN -- JANUARY 19, 2021: Maxar satellite imagery of Raven Rock Mountain near Blue Ridge Summit in Pennsylvania. Please use: Satellite image (c) 2021 Maxar Technologies.
Raven Rock Mountain is near Blue Ridge Summit in Pennsylvania (Picture: DigitalGlobe/Getty Images)

The Raven Rock Mountain Complex, dubbed ‘Harry’s Hole’ after President Truman who gave the project the thumbs-up, has maintained an air of mystery since its construction began in 1948, first opening its doors in 1953.

Raven’s Rock was constructed with the intention of being a ‘centrepiece of a large emergency hub’ according to Garret Graff, author of Raven Rock: The Story of the U.S. Government’s Secret Plan to Save Itself – While The Rest Of Us Die.

Boasting 100,000 feet of office space, the bunker could facilitate up to 1,400 people.

The base also has two 1,000 foot-long tunnels as well as 34-ton blast doors to help reduce the impact of a possible bomb attack.

Raven Rock Mountain Complex ? Fairfield, Pennsylvania - Atlas Obscura
The entrance to the Raven Rock Mountain Complex (Picture: Atlas Obscura)

The site was placed into standby mode by President George H.W. Bush in 1991 – however, $652million worth of upgrades were added to the site following 9/11.

According to Graff, the underground city was kitted out with 27 new fuel tanks in 2012, both carrying 20,000 gallons.

Right now the bunker is thought to have 900,000 square feet of office space, as well as space for 3,000-5,000 government employees. However, family members wouldn’t be allowed to live in the base.

Mr Graff added: ‘Families would have been prohibited from Raven Rock — as they would have been from effectively all of the Doomsday bunkers. 

‘Although in recent years as the veil of complete secrecy has lifted, family members of Raven Rock personnel are allowed to visit it for specific ceremonies. 

‘So at the very least, family members today can picture where their relatives will spend Doomsday, even as they’re barred outside.’ 

Cheyenne Mountain Complex

COLORADO SPRINGS, CO - MAY 10: A soldier walks into the mouth of the tunnel at Cheyenne Mountain Air Force Station on May 10, 2018 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. NORAD is celebrating its 60th Anniversary. (Photo by RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post via Getty Images)
Cheyenne Mountain Complex is home to North American Aerospace Defense Command (Picture: RJ Sangosti/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

Cheyenne Mountain Complex, located in El Paso County, Colorado, is a defence bunker for the United States Space Force.

Better known as the headquarters for the North American Aerospace Defense Command, the site was built in the 1950s over paranoia about the Cold War.

Its five chambers have reservoirs for fuel and water – and in one section there’s even reportedly an underground lake.

COLORADO SPRINGS, CO - MAY 11: At the second interior entrance to the Cheyenne Mountain Complex headquarters for NORAD a military officer exits the administrative area May 11, 2004 in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Constructed during the Cold War period in 1958, NORAD (North American Aerospace Command) was responsible for external air, missile and space defense. Since September 11, 2001, it now watches 7,000 aircraft per day within the US NORAD covers each aircraft's flight pattern including contingencies for the US President's flights and landings. NORAD coordinates with civilian authorities and works with the Pentagon, federal, state and local authorities. Canadian military officials make up 10-15 percent of NORAD's 326 total staff. NORAD works with Department of Homeland Security (DHS) but is not part of DHS. The personnel work at 7,000 feet inside a granite mountain. Two 25-ton security doors seal the inside offices from any type of attack. NORAD has a self sufficient survival system with independent water and air supplies. (Photo by Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images)
This huge door keeps the outside world out (Picture: Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images)

Almost $40 million was invested into the facility in order to kit it out with the best technology, including 15 console displays and three room-sized Philco 212 computers.

The Cheyenne Mountain Complex costs $250,000,000 to run every year and can hold up to 1,000 people a month.

It was on the brink of closure prior to 9/11 and was briefly put on standby mode in 2006, but the Obama administration revived the base and the Pentagon announced it would re-staff the bunker in 2015.

Camp Century tunnels, Greenland

In April 2024, NASA scientist Chad Greene flew aboard a Gulfstream III with a team of engineers, monitoring a radar instrument as it probed the Greenland Ice Sheet below. Flying about 150 miles east from Pituffik Space Base in northern Greenland, Greene snapped this photo from the aircraft?s window showing the vast, barren expanse of the ice sheet?s surface. That?s when the radar unexpectedly detected something buried within the ice.?We were looking for the bed of the ice and out pops Camp Century,? said Alex Gardner, a cryospheric scientist at NASA?s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), who helped lead the project. ?We didn?t know what it was at first.?
A radar instrument captured the remnants of ‘Camp Century’ earlier this year (Picture: NASA)

Deep below the thick ice of Greenland lies a labyrinth of tunnels that were once thought to be the safest place on Earth in case of a war.

First created during the Cold War, Project Iceworm saw the US plan to store hundreds of ballistic missiles in a system of tunnels dubbed ‘Camp Century’.

At the time, US military chiefs had hoped to launch a nuclear attack on the Soviet Union during the height of Cold War tensions if things escalated.

But less than a decade after it was built, the base was abandoned in 1967 after researchers realised the glacier was moving.

The sprawling sub-zero tunnels have been brought back to attention after recent tensions between Iran, Israel and the United States.

The underground 1.8mile (3km) network of tunnels once included labs, shops, a cinema, a hospital, and accommodation for hundreds of soldiers.

A version of this article was published in February 2024.

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