The Cold War-era shelter, hidden below the Greenbrier Resort in West Virginia, was designed to house members of Congress in the event of a nuclear attack.
Paul Bugas, who directed operations at a secret doomsday bunker, hidden beneath an opulent resort in West Virginia and intended to shelter members of Congress in the event of a Cold War-era nuclear attack, died on July 1 in Richmond, Va. He was 96.
In 1971, after serving in the military for 20 years, Mr. Bugas (pronounced BYOO-gus), known as Fritz, arrived at the Greenbrier Resort, nestled in the Allegheny Mountains in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., under the guise of being the regional manager of a company with the anodyne name Forsythe Associates.
He did, in fact, work part time as a technician for the shell company, providing cables, television sets and other electronics to the sprawling resort, where presidents, members of Congress and foreign dignitaries were regularly among the well-heeled guests. But Mr. Bugas’s primary (if furtive) role was as the superintendent of an enormous bunker with the code name Project Greek Island, built to keep Congress functioning in the aftermath of nuclear war.
The shelter, roughly the size of an average Walmart store, was constructed between the late 1950s and 1962, the year of the Cuban missile crisis, the 13-day standoff between the United States and the Soviet Union over the presence of nuclear-armed Soviet missiles 90 miles off the coast of Florida.