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Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

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  • Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

    The tunnel people of Las Vegas: How 1,000 live in flooded labyrinth under Sin City's shimmering strip

    By Daily Mail Reporter

    Deep beneath Vegas’s glittering lights lies a sinister labyrinth inhabited by poisonous spiders and a man nicknamed The Troll who wields an iron bar.

    But astonishingly, the 200 miles of flood tunnels are also home to 1,000 people who eke out a living in the strip’s dark underbelly.

    Some, like Steven and his girlfriend Kathryn, have furnished their home with considerable care - their 400sq ft 'bungalow' boasts a double bed, a wardrobe and even a bookshelf.


    Deeper underground: Steven and Kathryn live in a 400sq ft 'bungalow' under Las Vegas which they have lovingly furnished with other people's castoffs





    One man's junk... Tunnel residents have created wardrobes for their clothes and salvaged furniture to make the subterranean world more homely. However, there is little they can do about the water on the floor


    House proud: Steven and Kathryn have also compiled their own library - and constructed shelves to house it

    They have been there for five years, fashioning a shower out of a water cooler, hanging paintings on the walls and collating a library from abandoned books.

    Their possessions, however, are carefully placed in plastic crates to stop them getting soaked by the noxious water pooling on the floor.

    'Our bed came from a skip oustide an apartment complex,' Steven explains. 'It's mainly stuff people dump that we pick up. One man's junk is another man's gold.

    ‘We get the stuff late at night so people don't see us because it's kind of embarrassing.’


    Flood tunnels: Amy lives in the labyrinth with her husband Junior. The couple lost their home after the death of their baby son



    Steven was forced into the tunnels three years ago after his heroin addiction led to him losing his job.

    He says he is now clean and the pair survive by ‘credit hustling’ in the casinos, donning second-hand clothes to check the slot machines for chips accidentally left behind.

    Further into the maze are Amy and Junior who married in the Shalimar Chapel – one of Vegas’s most popular venues - before returning to the tunnels for their honeymoon.

    They lost their home when they became addicted to drugs after the death of their son Brady at four months old.

    ‘I heard Las Vegas was a good place for jobs,’ Amy said. ‘But it was tough and we started living under the staircase outside the MGM casino.

    ‘Then we met a guy who lived in the tunnels. We’ve been down here ever since.’

    Matthew O’Brien, a reporter who stumbled across the tunnel people when he was researching a murder case, has set up The Shine A Light foundation to help.


    Home comforts: The tunnel people decorate the homes and even lay scraps of carpet on the concrete floor to make it more comfortable



    Graffiti artists have turned this area of the tunnel network into a gallery: The channels stretch for more than 200 miles under the ground

    ‘These are normal people of all ages who’ve lost their way, generally after a traumatic event,’ he said.

    ‘Many are war veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress.

    ‘It’s not known how many children are living there, as they’re kept out of sight, but I’ve seen evidence of them – toys and teddy bears.’

    O’Brien has published a book on the tunnel people called Beneath The Neon.
    These evocative images which show the community's astonishing way of life were taken by Austin Hargrave, a British photographer now based in the U.S.

    They show how the destitute and hopeless have constructed a community beneath the city and have even dedicated one section of tunnels to an art gallery filled with intricate graffiti.



    Back above ground: The blazing lights of the strip give no indication of the city's dark underbelly



    Entrance: The towers and fantastical buildings of Vegas can be seen in the background



    Chink of light: Most of the people who live underground have fallen into destitution after struggling with drink, drugs or mental health problems

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz15eWpQWou

  • #2
    Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

    I visit Las Vegas often (family). You could rent a half way decent apartment for $500.00 a month or even less. If you can't scrape that together and your not incapacitated in some way then shame on you.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

      Originally posted by BigBagel View Post
      I visit Las Vegas often (family). You could rent a half way decent apartment for $500.00 a month or even less. If you can't scrape that together and your not incapacitated in some way then shame on you.
      Most of the people who live underground have fallen into destitution after struggling with drink, drugs or mental health problems.
      We need a new thread category: iTulipers' feel good stories

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

        Originally posted by BigBagel View Post
        I visit Las Vegas often (family). You could rent a half way decent apartment for $500.00 a month or even less. If you can't scrape that together and your not incapacitated in some way then shame on you.
        Did a market study of housing there.

        You could rent a whole house for $500 a month, plus utilities and maybe property taxes. Real world rents for a room in a house are probably $250 a month or less.

        But, LV has the highest unemployment rate in the nation. Who is going to hire some strung out junkies like the couple in that picture?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

          Originally posted by Serge_Tomiko View Post
          Who is going to hire some strung out junkies like the couple in that picture?

          I have no idea. The mortgage arm of the Bank of America maybe?

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

            He says he is now clean and the pair survive by ‘credit hustling’ in the casinos, donning second-hand clothes to check the slot machines for chips accidentally left behind.
            That doesn't ring true to me.

            Few, if any, casinos still use chips in slot machines. The paper credit slips are much easier to manage and add the bonus of expiring after 60 days.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

              Originally posted by c1ue View Post
              That doesn't ring true to me.

              Few, if any, casinos still use chips in slot machines. The paper credit slips are much easier to manage and add the bonus of expiring after 60 days.
              I believe they're checking slots for outstanding credits showing on the machine. Some drunk might walk away with a few dollars left on the machine. They could push the cash out button and cash in the ticket.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

                They are known as slot checkers and Surveillance and Casino Security watch for this.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

                  Maybe this is a stupid question - but do these tunnels have a purpose? Like if it really rains, maybe a once in a decade or once in a generation generation event - then won't they flood?

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

                    Originally posted by wayiwalk View Post
                    Maybe this is a stupid question - but do these tunnels have a purpose? Like if it really rains, maybe a once in a decade or once in a generation generation event - then won't they flood?
                    Yes they were built to handle flash floods.

                    According to this article:

                    True, the average annual rainfall in Las Vegas is only 4 inches a year, but I have seen storms drop what would have been more than 2 inches an hour — if it had rained that long. Most of our summer storms last less than 15 minutes, but these storms can be very intense.
                    .
                    .
                    .
                    In fact, in the last 15 years, I have seen at least four weather events that were classified as being “100-year storms.”

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

                      I moved to Vegas during this storm in 99:

                      http://www.usatoday.com/weather/news/1999/w709veg.htm

                      Las Vegas swamped by killer flood

                      A mobile home slides into Flamingo Wash floodwaters following heavy rains in Las Vegas Thursday (AP Photo/Las Vegas Sun, Aaron Mayes)

                      LAS VEGAS (AP) - A powerful summer storm transformed this simmering desert city into a raging river that swamped hundreds of cars, smashed mobile homes and killed at least two people.
                      ''It's a wide strip of devastation,'' Gov. Kenny Guinn said after taking a helicopter tour of flooded areas Thursday evening, when the water finally started to recede.
                      Las Vegas isn't used to this kind of downpour, with 3 inches falling in just a few hours Thursday. The Las Vegas area usually receives slightly more than 4 inches in an entire year.
                      Ron McQueen, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, said it was the city's worst flooding in 15 years: Water turned parts of Interstate 15 into a lake, most intersections were under water much of the day and firefighters rescued stranded motorists from their waterlogged cars.
                      ''It was picking up cars and throwing them around like toothpicks,'' said Robert Anderson, who watched as his neighbor's mobile home was swept away. ''It was a huge double-wide and it just went into the water and it just disintegrated.''
                      Clark County Fire Department spokesman Steve La-Sky said hundreds of cars were trapped in high water and at least three mobile homes had been lost.
                      The rain appeared to have led to the deaths of two people, a man whose body was found in a flood channel and a woman who died in a traffic accident, officials said.
                      Hotel crews attempt to clear water from the Las Vegas Hilton ballroom area Thursday after flash flooding (AP).

                      Tourists sought shelter in the casinos along the famed Strip.
                      ''The Strip is a lake, up over the curbs, into our fountains,'' said Phil Cooper, spokesman for Caesars Palace hotel-casino.
                      Part of the casino was closed.
                      Flights at McCarran International Airport were shut down for 45 minutes, and two planes were diverted to Los Angeles, airport spokeswoman Cynthia Markson said.
                      ''It's a nightmare. It's one of the worst things I've ever seen,'' said Nevada Highway Patrol spokesman Scott Flabi.
                      Gilles Bloch, a tourist from France who watched the flooding from his hotel room at the Sahara hotel-casino, described the city: ''Looking out the window, it looked like a beautiful woman who had been crying, and all the makeup was running down her face. That's Las Vegas today.''
                      Meanwhile, in California, monsoon rains flooded roadways and fields in southern parts of the state, sending children into the streets of Hemet for improvisational surfing on water boards tied behind pickup trucks.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

                        If you want to experience a flash-flood, even risk drowning-to-death, then reside in a sub-tropical desert. Heavy rain in deserts is a well-known quirk of the climate. And that is why there is no excuse for Pakistan ( and for Jeddah, Saudi-Arabia ) to not have had flood-control channels built and ready, no matter how infrequently it rains.

                        The Battle of El Alamein, a famous WWII tank battle, occurred in heavy rain and flooding, in the Qatarra Depression of Egypt--- one of the driest places on Earth. The Qatarra Depression is well below sea-level, in the Sahara Desert.
                        Last edited by Starving Steve; November 18, 2010, 08:48 PM.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

                          Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
                          If you want to experience a flash-flood, even risk drowning-to-death, then reside in a sub-tropical desert. Heavy rain in deserts is a well-known quirk of the climate. And that is why there is no excuse for Pakistan ( and for Jeddah, Saudi-Arabia ) to not have had flood-control channels built and ready, no matter how infrequently it rains.

                          The Battle of El Alamein, a famous WWII tank battle, occurred in heavy rain and flooding, in the Qatarra Depression of Egypt--- one of the driest places on Earth. The Qatarra Depression is well below sea-level, in the Sahara Desert.
                          I hike in the desert when I'm out there. I worry a little if it looks like rain and that's something that happens more then I expected. If your hiking in a canyon you could drown. At least that's what I'm told but what do I know. I'm a Bronx boy not a desert rat.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

                            A lot of these types prefer the "freedom" of that type of life to the responsibility of a job and rent, etc. And like the article said, most have addiction problems. These types have always existed even in the best of economic times. One couple said they'd been there five years. Five years ago if you couldn't find a job in LV you were either not trying or you looked like a serial killer. It's sad and pathetic , but what can you do about it? And yes, a flash flood will sweep everything in those tunnels away.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Tunnel Vision: Underground in America

                              Originally posted by Serge_Tomiko View Post
                              Who is going to hire some strung out junkies like the couple in that picture?
                              Wall St.? "Now if you don't pump at least 10 stocks on yahoo today then no fix for you mr. addict"

                              Comment

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