I kept expecting to read the part where he was charged with some combination of trespassing, building code violations, drug trafficking, etc. Instead it looks like the police correctly recognized that he wasn't a threat, and let him off with a warning.
I glanced back over the article twice because I was certain I'd missed the part where a life-ruining set of felony charges and fines had been thrown at the guy.
I'll admit that I too have dreamt about doing something like this, but more along the lines of adding a sub-basement beneath an existing one. Almost like a Cold-War era bomb shelter, or safe room. Doing so on public property is obviously a bad idea for a number of reasons. Also barbecuing in an enclosed space-great way to win a Darwin award.
Yeah, it's likely a terrible idea to start "modding" a pre-built home without consulting builders, getting the correct permits, etc. There's probably few non-nutcase reasons why a person would do this, as your link attests to. Still, a man can dream about having an indoor shooting gallery, or whatever. The best option would be to construct from scratch.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 26.7 ms ] threadHere in the US, the prosecutor would be trying figure out which of 10 million potential terrorism charges could be thrown at the guy.
Happy endings are nice.
http://www.kvue.com/story/news/local/2014/05/25/2435656/
EDIT: Ha, I Googled it and here's a commenter on BoingBoing saying it's largely a fabrication: http://boingboing.net/2006/08/10/seymour-cray-liked-t.html
I'm not sure who to believe now.
http://www.torontosun.com/2015/03/05/i-built-the-mystery-tun...