IT House reported on December 17 that based on reports from Wired magazine, Business Insider and other foreign media, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is building a huge building on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, including a building with a total area of ​​up to 5,000 square meters. sq. f

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IT House reported on December 17 that based on reports from Wired magazine, Business Insider and other foreign media, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is building a huge building on Kauai, Hawaii, including a building with a total area of ​​up to 5,000 square meters. sq. ft. of underground bunker and capable of being self-sufficient: having independent energy, food and water supply systems.

IT House reported on December 17 that based on reports from Wired magazine, Business Insider and other foreign media, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is building a huge building on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, including a building with a total area of ​​up to 5,000 square meters. sq. f - Lujuba

▲ Picture source "Wired"

According to reports, Zuckerberg's estate is called Koolau Ranch, and its estimated construction cost is about US$100 million (IT Home Note: currently about 712 million yuan), plus the purchase of land The total price of the US$170 million spent is approximately US$270 million (currently approximately RMB 1.922 billion), and there is still the possibility of being "undervalued". "Wired" magazine quoted sources as saying that this will be one of the most expensive properties in the world.

The complex includes at least 30 bedrooms and 30 bathrooms, as well as a network of 11 disc-shaped "treehouses". These "treehouses" are connected by rope bridges, allowing guests to shuttle between treehouses and stay in the "treetops."

The above-ground part of this building is two mansions, which will be connected to the underground bunker through a tunnel. There is also an escape hatch in the bunker. is guarded by a heavy explosion-proof door - this door is made of metal and concrete built .

Workers building the project are also bound by a strict confidentiality agreement, and they are prohibited from discussing what is currently being built.

LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman once told the New Yorker that it is estimated that more than half of Silicon Valley's billionaires have invested in some kind of "doomsday insurance", such as underground bunkers.

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