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For mines and quarries see Mining tourism

For natural underground structures see Caves

Underground works are a travel destination of interest to a number of travellers.

Humans have been digging holes and underground structures since prehistory.

As well as expanding natural caves, humans have constructed or expanded countless works of their own efforts underground from early residences of prehistory through to the tubes and tunnels of a modern urban lifestyle, or for the ever pressing need for life's essentials and disposal of it's wastes.

Some underground structures were built for warfare, be it tunnels under enemy positions or underground fortresses and anything from subsurface storage rooms through to the hardened bunkers built for a day after which thankfully never arrived.

Yet more underground structures were built to aid the flow of trade and people, be it road, river or rail, going underground made sense to the engineers of history when the surface way was congested or impractical to the demands. New underground structures are still being built to this day and sometimes they tunnel through the same mountain again but at a lower level, making for so called "base tunnels".

Get in

The easiest underground works to access are those which were clearly designed as public spaces or where tourist facilities have been installed specifically to aid access by visitors.

A number of cites have vast underground public spaces, such as Japan's underground shopping malls, or Houston's tunnel system. In other cities railway stations are partly or entirely under ground. Leipzig for instance recently opened new underground through tracks beneath its multilevel shopping mall / terminus railway station.

Many large cites have Urban rail whose stations and tracks are below the surface, whose public areas can be accessed for the price of a standard fare. Some systems of particular note are London and Moscow.

Whilst some Urban Rail systems occasionally run limited enthusiast tours 'behind the scenes', the health and safety considerations of a working railway, the current 'security' climate in many regions, coupled with the confined operational environment, mean that these are rare, and typically take place outside operational periods. Specialist Enthusiast publications may advertise these type of tours, but booking early is essential owing to limited numbers.

However, not all underground works are necessarily open to the traveller (even on an organized tour), It should be especially noted that military facilities (even if seemingly abandoned or out of use) often remain highly sensitive sites. An unexpected or unannounced visit could at best lead to a lengthy interrogation, with considerably worse outcomes depending ultimately on the mood of the personnel you encounter. You should make formal contact in writing with the relevant military authorities as soon as you have firm travel plans. Do not be disappointed if a planned or agreed visit has to be cancelled or curtailed for operational and security reasons. Or if you are denied access without any reason at all being provided.

See

For the countless underground works resulting from mining or quarrying see Mining tourism.

Australia

South Australia

  • 1 Coober Pedy. An opal mining town in the South Australian Outback that is almost fully underground, as this is the only way to ensure human habitation in the harsh climate.

Western Australia

  • Fremantle Prison Tunnels. A tunnel system in Western Australia underneath the Fremantle Prison

Bosnia and Herzegovina

  • 2 Sarajevo War Tunnel Museum, Sarajevo. A house converted to a museum sitting at the entrance of the tunnel that linked the city to the airport, thus providing the only lifeline for the inhabitants of the city during the Siege of Sarajevo which lasted for three years in the context of the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s.

Canada

  • 3 Diefenbunker - Canada's Cold War Museum, Carp, Ontario, toll-free: +1-800-409-1965. Self-guided tours 11AM-4PM daily, guided tours by reservation only. Built to protect the government from nuclear attack, this once-secret bunker is now a museum and National Historic Site of Canada. See the Ottawa and nuclear tourism articles for details $14 adults, $13 seniors, $10 students , $8 youth 6-18, $40 families (2 adults plus 3 youth), free for children 5 and under.

France

  • 4 Musée des Égouts de Paris (Entrance opposite 93, quai d'Orsay near the Pont d'Alma, Métro: Alma-Marceau), +33 1 53 68 27 81. For an interesting take on Paris, check out its underground sewer system. See swords found in the sewers over the years and get an appreciation for what it takes to keep Paris running. Full fare: €4.30, Student: €3.50.

Italy

  • The First World War on the Alpine Front pitted Austria-Hungary against Italy and involved a lot of mines and tunnels, some of which are still visible a century later.

Japan

  • Metropolitan Area Outer Underground Discharge Channel in Kasukabe, Saitama prefecture is a monumental underground flood-control system finished in 2009. It was constructed to prevent demages caused by the perennial floods which have plagued this part of the Kanto plain. It is possible to book a tour underground.

Korea

Grab your hard hats, you'll almost be going to North Korea
  • 5 The 3rd Tunnel (제3땅굴). In the demilitarized border zone between the Koreas there are tunnels dug by North Korea for the purpose of secretly moving troops under the border to the South. South Korea has found four such tunnels and the third one (or rather a section of it on the South Korean side) has been turned into a tourist attraction, often visited on a tour to the DMZ. As with many places in the DMZ, photography is not allowed in the tunnel itself but it's so dark and narrow you'll not be able to get any good photos anyway.

Norway

Elevator inside Gausta summit
  • 6 Fjell festning (Fjell fortress), Sotra island at Bergen. A second world war fortress mostly in mountain tunnels. Huge artillery was mounted on the summit. Now museum.
  • 7 Andersgrotta shelter, Kirkenes, Finnmark. A makeshift bomb shelter made the people of Kirkenes during the second world war. The small town of Kirkenes was the most bombed out town during the war after about 300 air raids.
  • 8 Gausta funicular (Gaustabanen), Rjukan. Small train/funicular transport through a 1000 meter horizontal tunnel and a sloping 1000 meter tunnel inside iconic Gausta summit. Built for military and telecom purposes in the 1950s, now open for tourists.
  • Bremnes fort, Lofoten. Fort with bunkers built by German forces during second world war. Artillery has been removed. Guided tours possible.

Turkey

  • 9 Basilica Cistern (Yerebatan Sarnıcı), Yerebatan Cad. 13, Sultanahmet, Istanbul. One of the many underground cisterns of Constantinople that was in use during the Roman, Byzantine, and Ottoman periods (and perhaps the most easily visitable one). Inside is an eerie "forest" of columns, standing on an ankle deep of water.
  • 10 Cappadocia. The early Christians dug numerous underground cities — complete with sleeping chambers, food storage, kitchens, wineries, and even an inn for traders — into the soft volcanic soils of the Cappadocia region, to escape raids and persecution.

United Kingdom

There are underground workings in chalk that can be visited as a tourist in West Wycombe & Chislehurst

For less well known Underground works consider joining a specialist organization such as Subterrana Brittanica who specialize in the research of such sites.

  • 11 Cabinet War Rooms and Churchill Museum, Clive Steps, King Charles St, London/Westminster (tube: Westminster). 09:30-18:00 daily (last admission 17:00), closed 24-26 Dec. A branch of the Imperial War Museum, the Cabinet War Rooms preserves the underground corridors and rooms from which Churchill and the cabinet directed the war against Hitler and the Nazis, maintained almost exactly as they were left in 1945. Opened in 2004, the attached Churchill Museum is the world's first permanent museum dedicated to the life and wartime achievements of Sir Winston Churchill, recently voted the Greatest Briton. £10, children under 16 free, seniors £8, students £8, unwaged £5, group concessions available.
  • Kelvedon Hatch Secret Bunker, +44 1277 364883. 10am to 4pm during the week and 10am to 5pm weekends & bank holidays.. A well preserved and maintained example of a Cold-war Rotor station, and one of the deepest Cold-war Bunkers in the United Kingdom. £7.00.


  • Electric Mountain, Llanberis, Gwynedd, LL55 4UR, +44 1286 870636. 7 days a week 10:00am - 4:30pm (closed December 24th, 25th 26th, 31st). Electric Mountain, is a visitor center and accompanied tour (which must be pre-booked) of the one of the UK's major hydro-power schemes at Dinorwig. The tour is not suitable for those Under 4. £8.50 (for tour).

Vietnam

  • Cu Chi Tunnels, Cu Chi. Mainly used for military purposes (although there was also a civilian life going on as the inhabitants of the town escaped the bombings on the ground), these tunnels were started in the 1940s during the French occupation and later expanded by the Viet Cong during the Vietnam War. Amounting to a claustrophobia-inducing system of 250 km of passages below the town, some of the former sleeping chambers, hospitals, and military headquarters are open for visits.
  • 12 Vinh Moc Tunnel, Demilitarized Zone. Near the border once separating North and South Vietnam from each other, the entire population of a village found refuge in this tunnel for two years during the Vietnam War.

Do

Photos

If you are permitted to take simple photos, take them. You should however be aware that taking photos in low light will require a 'fast' sensor and/or a fast lens. Many shots will be easiest with a wide-angle lens. Seek appropriate local advice if you wish to use a flash.

Stay safe

(see also Urbex#Stay safe)

There are few risks associated with underground works clearly adapted for tourism or intended as accessible public spaces, and if you have any doubts as to your ability or fitness (including mental attitude), sticking to these is very strongly recommended.

In order to stay safe when visiting less accessible underground works, It is vital to know as as much as possible about the specific sites(s) you wish to visit in advance, so you can plan accordingly.

Underground works, where access, up to and including the entrance, involves tight crawls; confined space; vertical drops; sharp climbs; any expanse or mass of water or in general where a failure of any equipment is going to become a critical problem, are considered beyond the scope of accessibility for the non-specialist. For safety advice concerning visiting these caves or works, specialist advice will need to be obtained from dedicated caving and subterranean exploration organizations, familiar with the specific site concerned.

For other reasonably accessible underground works, noting the previous paragraph, which are not as well adapted for the tourist or traveller (if at all), you should seek and heed local advice even if the works concerned seems easy at a cursory glance at the surface or entrance.

There is some detailed advice on cave safety at this site which is also applicable to underground works but some common sense follows:

Know the works you wish to visit and your exit(s) before you enter, and if there is more than one entrance or exit, know which ones will be safe to use. Practically all responsible underground explorations are planned only after weeks or months of research.

NEVER enter underground works alone, because not only will there be no-one to get you out, but no-one will know where you are!

It is best practice to follow the example of the professionals and visit in groups of at least four. As well as lodging plans with appropriate contacts, in nearly all circumstances a surface watchman is essential whose responsibility is to contact the authorities if things go bad or a group below the surface fails to return by a specified time.

Underground works are naturally dark, and without artificial light (which in disused or abandoned works you will have to provide yourself), you will have a hard time navigating them. Don't rely on a single light source, which could fail. Spare light sources are strongly recommended.

Check the weather first! A number of Underground works can and have flooded. In wet conditions water levels can change unexpectedly, limiting or cutting off access routes or even exits. In others the removal of flood or storm water is a primary function of the work concerned, and the water level in the system can change automatically within minutes. Getting caught by rising water levels isn't worth it.

DO NOT under under any circumstances enter any underground expanse or mass of water, without having in advance sought appropriate advice. (Not only can the depth be deceptive, but the water may not be as pure as its appearance suggests). Caution should similarly be exercised in respect of moderate mud; silt; and fallen debris.

Whilst countless disused military facilities may seem abandoned, many of them are still nominally restricted access sites, and unauthorized access to these will at the very least lead to a lengthy interrogation by the respective military authority. If in any doubt confirm your intended plans with the relevant authorities well in advance.

Disused facilities are not going to be well maintained, and fixed access equipment may well have been removed at abandonment, or has subsequently decayed beyond use.

In addition to dust, the local wildlife may not appreciate being unduly disturbed.

Respect

Be respectful of the underground environment you are visiting. Ideally you should try to leave the underground environment as you found it as far as possible. No garbage and human waste should be left behind. The very presence of human beings and light can also severely change the micro-climate in the underground environment, issues like Lampenflora or plants growing due to the light and warmth of artificial light sources being a serious problem in some underground structures.

Exceptional care must be exercised where unique historic (or prehistoric) cultural heritage exists, so that it it is not lost or degraded to future generations. Some of these sites are associated with tragic historical events and others are literally the place where people died or were buried. Some underground structures may also be considered "holy ground" in a religious or secular sense, so behave accordingly.

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