Why keepSafe?

Because nothing beats the combination of protection, quality, economy, versatility, and ease of installation of a keepSafe safe room

"After the 1998 F3 tornado that swept through the Bethany community, I knew our family needed a safer place to go during severe weather conditions.   After much research and cost comparisons, I concluded that keepSafe had the most affordable and safest above ground shelter on the market."    
Mike Hogue - Elrod, AL

"Engineered shelters not only provide the best protection against loss of life for individuals subjected to a tornado, but also furnish the only protection reliably capable of providing survivable places of refuge"--FEMA: October, 1999

keepSafe shelters provide:

Security, Safety, and Peace of Mind for your family:
steel construction with heavy duty, multiple point latching door (like a bank vault) keeps you and your loved ones safe.

Easy Access:
avoid exposing your family to the dangers from flying debris and illness from getting soaked to the skin while "leaving shelter to seek shelter";   the lifting of heavy doors, and climbing down steep stairs into a dark and dank cellar

Minimal Maintenance:
all keepSafe saferooms are constructed of either galvanized or powder coated steel.

Fast, simple, clean installation:
The bolt together, modular, above ground design eliminates the digging, welding, messy, and extended construction time normally associated with storm shelter installation.

It takes less than 15 minutes to go from blue skies to funnel clouds. "When that tornado warning comes, people need to put their families in a safe place" said the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The residents of Jarrell, Texas had a respectable 10 or 12 minute warning to get to an interior closet or hallway for protection. But as one official said the day after the disaster, "Folks, if you've seen what happened to those houses out there, it wouldn't matter. Even the closets were gone."

WASHINGTON (August 18, 1998): With more than 1000 tornadoes already recorded this year, government officials announced an effort to get people to build "safe rooms", modern versions of the old-fashioned storm cellar.

PROTECTION----ACCESSABILITY----AFFORDABILITY

copyright 2000/2001 keepSafe Industries, Inc. All rights reserved