Middle Tennessee sits in Dixie Alley. We build the concrete rooms that make sure your clients' families come out the other side — engineered to FEMA P-361 and ICC 500, rated to take a direct EF5 hit and the 15-lb missile that comes with it.
A storm shelter is the single place in a house where "we cut it a little close on spec" is the wrong answer forever. Ours are engineered to FEMA P-361 and ICC 500 — designed to survive a direct EF5 tornado and the wind-borne debris that does the actual killing.
In-garage pours sized from 6'×8' up to 8'×12', with below-grade options where the lot grade allows. Walls are 6" reinforced with a #4 bar grid; the roof slab and door-frame embed are part of the same monolithic, tested envelope. Nothing about the assembly is improvised.
Doors are rated steel from an approved manufacturer — hinges and multi-point latches tested to the same missile-impact standard as the walls. We handle the full envelope: footer, walls, roof slab, door frame, and code-required ventilation, and we register the completed shelter with the local emergency management agency so first responders know it's there.
We build to the stamped engineered drawings, document the reinforcement before the pour, and use only tested-and-approved door assemblies — because a shelter that isn't built to the standard isn't a shelter, it's a liability. We also register every completed unit with the local EMA. When you hand a homeowner a safe room, it's the real thing.
An in-garage safe room poured with a Spring Hill foundation, a below-grade shelter in Nolensville, and a retrofit anchored into an existing Murfreesboro garage.
These are life-safety structures. Every shelter is built to a stamped engineered design meeting FEMA P-361 / ICC 500 — no exceptions.
| Rating | FEMA P-361 · ICC 500 · EF5 / 250+ mph design wind Missile: 15-lb 2×4 @ 100 mph |
|---|---|
| Wall thickness | 6" reinforced concrete · #4 bar grid each face per design |
| Sizes | 6'×8' up to 8'×12' standard Sized to occupancy · ~3 sqft per person standing |
| Door | Rated steel · inswing · 3-point latch Tested assembly from approved manufacturer |
| Ventilation | Code-required air openings · debris-protected |
| Install | During the slab pour or post-build retrofit with engineered anchoring |
| Registration | Registered with local EMA on completion · GPS located for responders |
Four steps for a residential shelter. New-construction shelters fold into the foundation schedule; retrofits run as a stand-alone two-to-three-day job.
We start from a stamped FEMA P-361 / ICC 500 design sized to occupancy and the location, and pull any required permit.
Footer poured, wall forms set, the #4 grid tied each face, door-frame embed positioned to the rated assembly.
Monolithic roof slab poured and tied into the walls; the tested steel door and frame set and anchored.
Code ventilation installed, the room finished, and the completed shelter registered with the local EMA.
Six common shelter scenarios across Middle Tennessee. The engineered envelope is constant; placement and access change with the home.
Poured with the foundation on new custom homes — the cleanest and most economical way to add a rated safe room.
Most commonEngineered anchoring of a new shelter to a finished home's garage slab. Two-to-three-day install.
Finished homesBelow-grade concrete shelters where lot grade and water table allow, with protected access.
Lot-dependentReinforced rooms inside the conditioned footprint for homes without a suitable garage.
Interior8'×12' and custom footprints for larger households on the estate lots of Williamson County.
Custom sizeHigher-occupancy shelters for offices, daycares, and multi-family, engineered to head count.
CommercialWhat homeowners and builders ask us most about storm shelters.
Built to FEMA P-361 / ICC 500, yes — that's exactly what the standard certifies. The design wind is 250+ mph (EF5), and the assembly is tested against a 15-lb 2×4 fired at 100 mph, because wind-borne debris, not wind alone, is what causes most tornado fatalities. We build the tested assembly, not an approximation of it.
Yes. A retrofit in-garage shelter is one of our most common jobs — we anchor a new engineered shelter to the existing slab. It's typically a two-to-three-day install and doesn't require tearing into the foundation.
The standard plans for roughly 3 sqft per person standing for a tornado event, so a 6'×8' room handles a typical family with room to spare and an 8'×12' suits large households. We size the room to your head count and the available space.
Most jurisdictions require a permit, and we handle it. The shelter is built to a stamped engineered design, and we register the completed unit with the local emergency management agency so responders have its location after a storm.
In-garage is faster, drier, and accessible without going outside in a storm — our usual recommendation. Below-grade works where lot grade and the water table cooperate and a homeowner prefers it. We'll walk the site and tell you honestly what fits.