
SubTropolis

The interior of SubTropolis
SubTropolis is a 55,000,000
square foot (5,060,000 m³), manmade cave in the
bluffs above the Missouri
River
in Kansas City, Missouri
, United
States
that is claimed to be the world's largest
underground storage facility.
Developed by late
Kansas City
Chiefs owner
Lamar Hunt via Hunt
Midwest Real Estate Development, Inc., it has trademarked the
phrase
World's Largest Underground Business Complex.
Dug into the Bethany Falls
limestone mine
SubTropolis is at places beneath the surface. It has a grid of
high, wide tunnels separated by square limestone pillars created by
the
room
and pillar method of
hard rock mining. The complex
contains almost seven miles (11 km) of illuminated, paved roads and
several miles of
railroad track. Currently
5,000,000 square feet (460,000 m³) is occupied and 10,000,000
square feet (920,000 m³) are "improved." About of available space
are added each year as active mining continues.
The mine naturally maintains temperatures between 65 and 70 degrees
Fahrenheit (18 to 21 °C) year-round. The
United States Postal Service
and the
United States
Environmental Protection Agency lease spaces within
SubTropolis. The
USPS for its
collectible stamp operations and the
EPA for their
Region-7
Training and Logistics
Center.
On the
north edge of the complex Hunt developed the Worlds of Fun
and Oceans of
Fun
amusement park complex. Hunt's extensive
business dealings in Clay County contributed to the Chiefs having
their NFL Training Camp at
William Jewell College in
Liberty,
Missouri
until
1991.
Other
facilities like SubTropolis exist although not on the same scale,
such as the abandoned mine in Butler, Pennsylvania
used by Corbis and the
US Federal Government for
secure storage. As the room and pillar mining method is used
to extract limestone throughout the Midwest, many companies are
looking at ways to utilize the hundreds of millions of square feet
created in this manner for everything from
mushroom farming to
crude
oil stockpiling.
References
External links