The
Super Rich of Silicon Valley Have a Doomsday Escape Plan
Wealthy
Americans have stepped up investment in New Zealand. Parliament votes
to ban foreigners from buying bolt-hole homes.
By
Olivia Carville
5
September, 2018
Years
of doomsday talk at Silicon Valley dinner parties has turned to
action.
In
recent months, two 150-ton survival bunkers journeyed by land and sea
from a Texas warehouse to the shores of New Zealand, where they’re
buried 11 feet underground.
Seven
Silicon Valley entrepreneurs have purchased bunkers from Rising S Co.
and planted them in New Zealand in the past two years, said Gary
Lynch, the manufacturer’s general manager. At the first sign of an
apocalypse — nuclear war, a killer germ, a French Revolution-style
uprising targeting the 1 percent — the Californians plan to hop on
a private jet and hunker down, he said.
“New
Zealand is an enemy of no one,” Lynch said in an interview from his
office in Murchison, Texas, southeast of Dallas. “It’s not a
nuclear target. It’s not a target for war. It’s a place where
people seek refuge.”
The
remote island nation, clinging to the southern part of the globe
2,500 miles off Australia’s coast, has 4.8 million people and six
times as many sheep. It has a reputation for natural beauty, easy
networking, low-key politicians who bike to work, and rental prices
half those of the San Francisco Bay Area. That makes it an
increasingly popular destination not only for those fretting about
impending dystopia, but for tech entrepreneurs seeking incubators for
nurturing startups.
“It’s
become one of the places
for people in Silicon Valley, mostly because it’s not like Silicon
Valley at all,” said Reggie Luedtke, an American biomedical
engineer who’s moving to New Zealand in October for the Sir Edmund
Hillary Fellowship, a program created to lure tech innovators.
Luedtke,
37, said people in California have asked him if he’s relocating as
part of a doomsday contingency plan, because “that’s what the
country is known for.”
Such
notoriety has made New Zealand’s isolation, once deemed an economic
handicap, one of its biggest assets. The nation allows emigres to
essentially buy residency through investor visas, and rich Americans
have poured a fortune into the country, often by acquiring palatial
estates.
Billionaire
hedge-fund honcho Julian Robertson owns a lodge overlooking Lake
Wakatipu in Queenstown, the South Island’s luxury resort
destination. Fidelity National Financial Inc. Chairman Bill Foley has
a homestead in the Wairarapa region, north of Wellington,
and Titanic director
James Cameron bought a mansion nearby at Lake Pounui.
The
Investor Plus Visa, which requires a minimum investment of NZD$10
million ($6.7 million) over three years, attracted 17 U.S. applicants
in fiscal 2017, after President Donald Trump’s election.
Previously, it averaged six applicants a year.
More
than 10 Americans from the West Coast have bought multimillion-dollar
properties in the Queenstown region in the past two years, said Mark
Harris, managing director of the local Sotheby’s real estate
office.
In
August, partly in response to Americans gobbling up swaths of prime
real estate, New Zealand’s government banned foreigners from buying
homes, with the restrictions set to take effect in coming months.
Peter
Thiel, the billionaire co-founder of PayPal, ignited an uproar when
he was granted citizenship after spending just 12 days in the
country, prompting allegations that New Zealand’s passport was for
sale. Thiel, 50, owns a $13.8 million home on 477 acres (193
hectares) in the lakeside town of Wanaka, with views of snow-capped
mountains, and purchased another property in Queenstown, outfitted
with a safe room.
“If
you’re the sort of person that says ‘I’m going to have an
alternative plan when Armageddon strikes,’ then you would pick the
farthest location and the safest environment — and that equals New
Zealand if you Google it,” former Prime Minister John Key said in a
phone interview.
“It’s
known as the last bus stop on the planet before you hit Antarctica,”
he said. “I’ve had a lot of people say to me that they would like
to own a property in New Zealand if the world goes to hell in a
handbasket.”
Kiwis
would find this both crazy and amusing, Key said, but it makes sense
for some of the wealthiest people on the planet.
“We
live in a world where some people have extraordinary amounts of
wealth and there comes a point at which, when you have so much money,
allocating a very tiny amount of that for ‘Plan B’ is not as
crazy as it sounds.”
At
three recent Silicon Valley dinner parties, guests discussed bugging
out to New Zealand if there’s trouble, according to attendees who
asked not to be identified because the events were private.
At
one, a prominent venture capitalist was said to have told fellow
diners of his escape plans. In the garage of his San Francisco home,
he told guests, is a bag of guns hanging from the handlebars of a
motorcycle. The bike will allow him to weave through traffic on the
way to his private plane, and the guns are for defense against
encroaching zombies that may threaten his getaway.
He
intends to fly to a landing strip in Nevada where a jet sits in a
hangar, its sole purpose to whisk him and four billionaire co-owners
to safety. Their destination: New Zealand — or Aotearoa, which
means “Land of the Long White Cloud” in Maori.
In
the event of a pandemic, Sam Altman, president of Silicon Valley
startup incubator Y Combinator, plans to escape to New Zealand with
Thiel, the New
Yorker reported
in 2016. Now he says he was just joking.
“The
world is so interconnected now that if anything was to happen, we
would all be in pretty bad shape, unfortunately,” Altman, 33, said
in a phone interview. “I don’t think you can just run away and
try to hide in a corner of the Earth.”
Still,
Altman said biological warfare is the biggest threat to civilization
and that people aren’t “as scared enough about that as they
should be.”
He
has a go bag stuffed with a gun, antibiotics, batteries, water,
blankets, a tent and gas masks.
Doomsday
fantasies run deep in American culture.
Think
of schoolchildren practicing the duck-and-cover maneuver during the
height of the Cold War. Apocalyptic religious cults never seem to end
well, from Jim Jones’s Peoples Temple in the 1970s to Heaven’s
Gate and the Branch Davidians in the 1990s. Just six years ago, many
Americans believed the world was ending because of a Mayan prophesy.
What’s
different about Silicon Valley is that those entertaining fears of
the eschaton have the means to put elaborate plans into action.
Robert
Vicino, founder of the Vivos Project, a builder of massive
underground bunkers, said Silicon Valley elites discussed detailed
plans to flee to New Zealand last year at the World Economic Forum in
Davos, Switzerland. He said they foresaw “a revolution or a change
where society is going to go after the 1 percenters.” In other
words, them.
New
Zealand isn’t the best solution, he said, because a tsunami caused
by an asteroid strike in the Pacific could submerge the island’s
highest point.
Photos from the Rising S factory in Murchison, Texas
But
Vicino is a businessman, and demand dictates he get to work on a
bunker on the northern tip of the South Island that would accommodate
about 300 people. The price: $35,000 a head.
That’s
a bargain compared with the most expensive bunker Lynch’s Rising S
has shipped to New Zealand — $8 million.
The
two 1,000-square-foot bunkers sent earlier this year had to be
divided into sections and loaded onto 19 tractor-trailers to start
the trek from Texas, he said.
One
landed in Picton, across the Cook Strait from Wellington, to be
transported to a sleepy town on the West Coast. The other arrived at
Auckland’s Waitemata Harbor and settled into the dirt somewhere in
Northland, a rugged region fringed by wild beaches.
A
spokeswoman for the New Zealand Customs Service declined to confirm
that the bunkers had arrived in the country, citing privacy reasons.
It
takes about two weeks to excavate the land and bury the average
bunker, Lynch said. It’s all done secretly so local residents
aren’t aware. Once installed, passersby would have no way of
knowing it’s there.
“There’s
no clue left behind, not even a door,” Lynch said.
So
the sight of an American billionaire wandering the sheep meadows
consulting his GPS and kicking at the dirt can only mean one thing:
It must be New Zealand.
Isn't it amazing that, given the significance for New Zealand that there is no one in this country who can or wants to cover this. The NZ Herald only recycles the Bloomberg article.
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