Home Fortification

Securing existing buildings

Home Fortification - Complete Guide

Reinforcing an existing building (house, apartment) to increase protection against attack, burglary, or shock wave.

Warning: don't turn your home into a trap

Any reinforcement must preserve fire safety and evacuation. Do not permanently block exits or create obstacles for rescue.

Create a "panic room" inside the house - a room without windows, with solid doors, where you can take shelter as a last resort.

Priorities: first 24 hours

You get the most impact by reducing injury risk and organizing the space.

  • Pick an interior safe room and move essentials there.
  • Secure glass and heavy furniture against tipping.
  • Stage lighting and a fire extinguisher where you can reach them.
  • Define evacuation routes and an outdoor meeting point.

Window Protection

Windows are the weakest point. Use anti-burglary film, external roller shutters, and in a crisis - boards, sandbags, or OSB boards.

  • Remove loose items from sills; they become projectiles in impacts.
  • During strong winds, stay away from glass.
  • Make any cover removable—don't block emergency egress.

Door Reinforcement

Solid anti-burglary doors, additional bolts, anti-pry locks. Reinforce the frames.

  • Reinforce hinges and strike plates; they often fail first.
  • Manage entry visibility without exposing the whole interior.
  • Agree on who opens the door and when; reduce chaos.

Wall Reinforcement

In case of shelling, sandbags placed inside against external walls provide additional ballistic protection.

An interior “safe room”

A room you use briefly when danger is sudden (debris, warnings, nearby violence).

  • No windows (or as few as possible); ideally near the building core.
  • Seating/blankets, basic light, first aid and a radio.
  • Keep evacuation possible; do not permanently barricade the door.

Useful Materials

Sandbags, boards, nails, OSB boards, protective film, repair tape.