I thought due to the amount of Members that went on the tour yesterday i do a thread that everyone can add there pics and experiences instead of having loads of threads on the same place.
Keep the Pictures to a Maxium of 8 each to save people with slower internet connections waiting all day to view.
I had a really good tour was very interesting listening to Nick about the Bunker, It was alot smaller than i imagened it to be avery wet inside all in all well worth the trip and at least i can say i have seen it. Big thanks to everyone who organised it.
Here's my Pics
Was pretty hard to get amazing pics due to the moving tour but i done my best.
Matt
Keep the Pictures to a Maxium of 8 each to save people with slower internet connections waiting all day to view.
"Paddock was built at the start of the 2nd World War below the Post Office Research Station in Dollis Hill. The purpose of the two level citadel was to act as a standby to the Cabinet War Rooms in Whitehall. The bunker became operational in 1940 with the War Cabinet meeting there on 3rd October.
Churchill did not like the new bunker and by the autumn of 1943 the standby cabinet war rooms were relocated to the North Rotunda in Marsham Street, close to Whitehall; Paddock was abandoned the following year.
During the cold war, Paddock was suggested as a replacement for the North London Group War Room at Partingdale Lane, Mill Hill but this was rejected by the GLC. It was also, along with Station Z at Harrow, suggested as the Main Control Centre for the whole of London with the 4 (later 5) Group Controls reporting to it. The idea of 1 central control was never adopted and the upper floor at Paddock was relegated to a Post Office social club.
Following closure of Post Office Research Station, in the mid 1990's the site was sold to a property developer who converted the Research Station into luxury flats with a new housing estate on the rest of the site. The single storey surface building above Paddock was demolished but the citadel, which has local authority listing was untouched and two access points were retained one an unobtrusive steel door in a wall between two houses and the other a brick blockhouse beside the road which also houses a small electricity sub station. The site has now been handed over to a housing association."
I had a really good tour was very interesting listening to Nick about the Bunker, It was alot smaller than i imagened it to be avery wet inside all in all well worth the trip and at least i can say i have seen it. Big thanks to everyone who organised it.
Here's my Pics
Was pretty hard to get amazing pics due to the moving tour but i done my best.
Matt