Conceived in the early years of World War II as a plan to bury four fuel containers horizontally in a hillside at the U.S. Navy facility at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage Facility ultimately encompassed the design and construction of 20 vertical storage tanks - each large enough to contain a 20-story building - buried in the volcanic hillside and connected by tunnels to a harbor-side pumping station more than two-and-a-half miles away.
Goodrich
![Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage Facility](/sites/default/files/styles/landmark_node_/public/2018-03/Red_Hill_Historic.png?itok=ulTgaWMi)
YearAdded:
Image Credit: Courtesy Wikicommons/Leslie Nelson (CC BY-SA 4.0)Image Caption: Above-ground fuel storage tanks at Pearl Harbor prior to the construction of Red Hill.Era_date_from: 1943
1994
Innovations
![Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage Facility](/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail/public/2018-03/Red_Hill_Historic.png?itok=NKeq3KJz)
Conceived in the early years of World War II as a plan to bury four fuel containers horizontally in a hillside at the U.S. Navy facility at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage Facility ultimately encompassed the design and construction of 20 vertical storage tanks - each…
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