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March 2002 -- Gaffco receives write-up in The Journal News
(see article below).
Somewhere
to Hide
Panic rooms offer secret refuge
in times of crisis
When Tom Gaffney
gets done refinishing a bathroom, it looks the same as it did
when he started. But look beyond the porcelain fixtures and tiled
floors and you find the equivalent of a mini-fortress.
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Tom
Gaffney, President of Gaffco Inc. in Mount Vernon, holds a
section of bullet-resistant glass that had been shot five
tirnes with a 44-caliber Magnum. The bullets did not penetrate
the glass. Gaffney said demand for safe roonns has gone through
the roof after Sept. 11. He expects to build 200 safe rooms
this year: before the terrorist attacks the company built
25 a year.
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The walls,
floor and ceiling have been reinforced with steel plates and bullet-resistant
Plexiglass. One door, similarly outfitted, has a four-point system
that locks into the jambs, floor and ceiling. The room has a fire-suppression
system and an oxygen tank. A secret compartment in the medicine
cabinet has room for a gun and cell phone.
It sounds
like a specially designed commode for James Bond. But, in reality,
this is a so-called "safe room," the likes of which are in high
demand by corporate executives, foreign dignitaries and the well-to-do.
Rooms like
these are at the center of a Jodie Foster movie, "Panic Room,"
in theaters starting March 29. A divorced woman and her daughter
are caught in a cat-and-mouse game inside their brownstone after
three burglars come looking for a stash of cash. They hide in
a "panic room," a secret refuge designed to protect occupants
from intruders and would-be kidnappers.
Demand in
the safe-room market became "huge" after the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, said Gaffney, president of Gaffco Inc. The Mount Vernon
company manufactures and installs bullet-resistant systems combined
with high-end woodworking.
Before Sept.
11, the company built 25 safe rooms a year. In 2002, Gaffney expects
to construct 200. "It's just gone off the rack," he said. "We're
getting calls we never got before in our lifetime."
Master bathrooms
at the homes of clients are converted to safe rooms because they're
most accessible in the event of a night-time break-in. The bathrooms
have fully functional indoor plumbing and to the naked eye appear
to be nothing extraordinary. But its not every bathroom door that
can withstand the blows of a sledgehammer.
Gaffney, who's built about
150 safe rooms in residential and corporate office settings over six years, noted
that Gaffco's roots were in building check-cashing stores in New York City. "We
learned a few tricks along the way," he said. Depending on how lavish the bathrooms
are, costs can range from $30,000 to $100,000. "It all depends," he said. "I can
build the BatCave."
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