Oct 12, 2022

Pyramids and Missiles in North Dakota

Now here’s the real reason we based out of Grahams Island for the week. There’s an abandoned military base in northeastern ND. Called The Pyramid of North Dakota, the Stanley R Mickelson Safeguard Complex, built at a cost of over six billion dollars, was fully operational for less than three days before being shut down.

The facility is not open to the public. You get a photo from outside the fence and that’s it. Parts of the facility and grounds have been sold throughout the years. A Hutterite community purchased a lot of the land and is using it for farming. Most recently, a bitcoin mining company has purchased the buildings with the intentions of building a data center. As the governor noted in his announcement, the climate in North Dakota is conducive for reduced cooling costs.  

Harold’s Navy buddy, Kevin, drove over from Minnesota with his father-in-law. After the photo outside the Pyramid fence, it was an hour and a half drive to Cooperstown and the Ronald Reagan Historic Missile Site. You can tour the Minuteman Missile launch control facility, including the underground capsules. Then you can drive over to the nearby preserved missile silo site. 

Harold and I were both a bit surprised at the differences in the capsules between this site and Quebec-1 in Chugwater, WY. This capsule seemed much larger.

As an aside, both the Ronald Reagan and Quebec-1 sites are much easier to tour than the popular Minuteman Missile site in Interior, SD. We have yet to see that one since we didn’t plan far enough in advance to get tickets. Maybe someday we’ll get to see that one.

Pyramid in the prairie

So where is that security camera?

We were here

Soon to be a data center

Oscar Zero Command

It takes two keys to launch

Missile site

Missile Doors
 

Where Are We Going Next?

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