Mara tapped the laminated card pinned to her hard hat. It read: "Safe Haven — Building 43."
It was the map.
Outside, the vapor cloud dissipated. Inside the old control room, a single monitor still glowed — showing the bunker, safe and distant, where the shift lived on. Based on real-world guidance from API RP 752 (3rd Edition), which emphasizes risk evaluation, building siting studies, and mitigation for existing occupied buildings in process plants. api rp 752 pdf
At 2:17 a.m., Mara sat in the new module, watching six screens showing the old control room, dark and silent. The only sound was the hiss of breathing air — positive pressure to keep out toxic vapors.
"Dispatch, Reactor 7 release," she said, calm. "Initiate ESD-2." Mara tapped the laminated card pinned to her hard hat
She typed into the log: "Release contained. No injuries. Occupied building exposure: none — per 752 relocation plan."
Then the low-pressure alarm on Reactor 7 chirped. Inside the old control room, a single monitor
So last Monday, they rolled in a portable operations module — a white double-wide with blast-rated walls and a separate HVAC. They parked it 600 feet west, behind the sulfur pit berm. Mara’s supervisor called it "the bunker." The crew called it "Fort Anxiety."