Mole hole

For the rodent habitation, see Burrow.
Diagram of the "Christmas Tree" at the former Glasgow Air Force Base, with the mole hole in the lower right-hand corner. Near identical facilities were constructed at other former SAC bases such as Barksdale AFB, Robins AFB, McCoy AFB, etc.

A mole hole, officially designated the Readiness Crew Building (RCB),[1] is a type of structure built by the United States Air Force at former Strategic Air Command (SAC) bases around the country during the 1950s and 1960s. RCBs were located adjacent to an Alert Ramp, also called a "Christmas Tree", where Ready Alert aircraft were parked. These aircraft were initially B-47 Stratojet aircraft armed with nuclear weapons, augmented by KC-97 Stratofreighter aerial refueling aircraft. As SAC introduced newer bomber and aerial tanker aircraft into its inventory, the B-47 and KC-97 were later superseded by B-52 Stratofortress, B-58 Hustler, FB-111 or B-1 Lancer bombers, augmented by KC-135 Stratotanker or KC-10 Extender aerial refueling aircraft.

History

Due to aircraft being parked at the "Christmas Tree" being on constant alert duty, the Strategic Air Command realized that they needed specialized buildings to house crews who rotated on alert duty. In 1958, Leo A Daly, an architect from Omaha, Nebraska, was hired to design buildings that would respectively hold 70, 100, and 150 men. These standardized structures would eventually be nicknamed "mole holes" due to the fact that the men would run out onto the "Christmas Tree" through corrugated steel tunnels attached to the lower level of the building when the alert Klaxon sounded. The buildings would house readiness crews and contained thick concrete exteriors, bathrooms, a briefing room for crew members, dormitories, several classrooms, a kitchen and a dining facility.[2][3] Since crews were typically assigned on alert for 7 day periods, some installations would later incorporate outdoor athletic facilities on site such as baseball fields or swimming pools, as well as picnic facilities where families could visit crewmembers on duty.

Crews on alert duty would typically be on alert for seven days out of a 21-day period, while being on rotational alert duty. During their alert duty, they would fly no training missions, as they were to be kept always ready for an operational launch in the event of a nuclear strike. [4]

During an alert scramble, flight crews and ground crews would run out to the "Christmas Tree", where they would travel on foot and/or by waiting alert vehicles to the alert bomber and tanker aircraft that were waiting to launch, typically between four and nine in number. Once all engines were started, the aircraft would perform an elephant walk to the runway, where a potential MITO would be performed.[2]

Over the course of their construction, 10 facilities to house 150 people were built. These were supplemented by an additional 10 facilities for housing 100 men, and 45 facilities for housing 70 men at a total of 65 SAC bases or other USAF bases where a SAC wing was a tenant command. The facilities replaced various facilities that housed crew members earlier, including house trailers which sat next to the aircraft.[3]

References

  1. "Loring Air Force Base, Alert Area" (PDF). Historic American Engineering Record. Loring Air Force Base: Library of Congress. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
  2. 1 2 "The Mole hole, Building 1303". Air Mobility Command Museum. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  3. 1 2 Stanley, Mark (9 March 2010). "The Mole Hole – SAC Part 5". Zimio.com. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
  4. Wilson, Bob (September 1999). "The Woodstock Debacle". Spectacle.org. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
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