UK wartime regional seats of government

An exsplination caption from Wikipedia.
Regional Seats of Government or RSGs were the best known aspect of Britain's civil defence preparations against Nuclear War. In fact, however, naming conventions changed over the years as strategies in Whitehall changed.

In the aftermath of the nuclear attack on Hiroshima and the Russian acquisition of the atom bomb, it was clear that London could not survive a nuclear bombardment. Although considerable effort still went into secret construction of military citadels under London, the solution was to disperse the machinery of government into small pieces in the provinces, where there would be a greater chance of survival.

Experiments along these lines had taken place during the Second World War, when a system of Regional Commissioners existed and key departments were moved out of London to Bath, Harrogate and Cheltenham, among others. However, the idea of a Regional Commissioner dated back to the First World War and the 1926 General Strike. -From Wikipeadia.

1962: The Apoclayse
In 1962: the Apocalyse the world had become more agresive and

Kenton Bar outside Newcastle upon Tyne RAF operations room

Lawnswood, Leeds

Chalfont Drive, Nottingham

Brooklands Avenue, Cambridge

Five sub controls in the outer suburbs were established - see Civil defence centres in London

Whiteknights Park, Reading

Flowers Hill, Bristol

Coryton, Cardiff

Shirley, Birmingham

Kirknewton, near Edinburgh

Tunbridge Wells

former underground aircraft factory and ammunition store at Hawthorn, Wiltshire, built in a vast complex of former Bath stone quarries near Bath, as a final emergency National Seat of Government.