Many of us have regular day jobs and
go into the city every day to get to work. For those
who work in an office setting there is no way to bring
a BOB. If you drive to work you can leave your BOB in
the car. For those who take public transit to work a
BOB is just not possible. As 9/11 showed there are a
few items that every office worker should have. An
emergency can happen at any time, and we should be
close enough to gear to get out of the office and on
your way to escaping the general area.
This sort of situation requires a small kit that we can
keep with us all or most of the time. If we base our
mini urban kit on the average office worker we can also
apply that to any other work setting. The average
office worker has a minimum amount of room to carry
things with them, plus those items must fit into the
general attire of the office worker.
Regardless of the specific threat, we are likely to
face fire or dust, lighting being out, and debris.
Since we're in a city we need a minimum of equipment,
even a few blocks is enough to put most dangers far
enough away that we can relax for a bit and worry about
getting home from there.
Working within the attire of the office worker we need
a small kit with enough items to get us out of the
immediate area. If we limit the size of our mini urban
kit so that it fits into part of a briefcase, laptop
bag or other small bag we don't have much room. The kit
itself needs to fit in these small bags yet remain
easily grabbed. A small waist or fanny pack of no more
than 4 inches thick by 6 inches high by 10 inches wide
(about the size of a 1 gallon Ziploc bag) is enough
room to fit everything we need. In this kit we can keep
the following:
- BIC lighter
- Nitrile and/or gardening gloves (leather palm)
- small AM/FM radio with bud earphones
(shortwave/weather if there is room)
- compass/whistle/match container with matches
- small tube of anti-bacterial, waterless hand cleaner
- small pack of baby wipes
- flat pack of duct tape (3 to 10 feet)
- first aid kit (extra anti-bacterial wipes and
assorted band aids)
- Emergency "space" blanket (2 if there's room)
- Money. Roll of quarters, $10 in ones & $20 in fives
(vending machines/pay phone)
- 20 oz bottle of water (empty 1 liter platypus type
bladder if there is room)
- tea/cocoa/coffee packets, sugar and creamer
- hard candy/granola or power bars
- Sunglasses, reading/spare glasses as required
- windbreaker (folds up into it's own pouch)
- bandana
- Knife or multi-tool
- keychain LED light, 2AA maglite or LED light. Extra
batteries if there is room.
- military type manual can opener
- safety goggles
- 3 day supply of prescription medications
- 2 dust masks
Small first aid kit
Most of
the items above are to aid you in getting out of the
building you are in, protecting your hands and eyes,
making sure you do not breath in dust, and in cleaning
yourself up once away from the immediate threat. In
fact the first six items will fit into the first kit I
suggest, while the first aid kit (with extras), the
emergency blanket and the duct tape will fit into a 1
quart Ziploc bag. If you were to purchase a windbreaker
with zippered pockets you could fit the all of the
items, minus the water bottle into the pockets of the
windbreaker. You would have to grab the windbreaker and
the bottled water and be on your way.
Items in a quart Ziploc bag

Items in a gallon Ziploc bag

The entire contents

1) leather work gloves with money and roll of
quarters inside fingers 2) bandanna 3)
whistle/match case/compass 4) 20 oz bottled
water 5) LED flashlight on keychain 6)
Gerber pouch with knife & military style can opener &
folding scissors 7) plastic spoon 8) 10
feet camo duct tape 9) travel pack of wet wipes
10) emergency "space" blanket 11) radio
and headphones 12) Bic lighter 13) first
aid kit with waterless hand cleaner/sanitizer & pair of
nitrile gloves 14) 2 chocolate bars
You will notice that there is no dust mask, safety
goggles or windbreaker. The windbreaker wouldn't fit on
the desk tray and I normally keep the goggles and dust
mask with it. The goggles and dust mask will fit into
the gallon Ziploc bag but the windbreaker doesn't with
the water bottle.
Normally I keep the Gerber multi-tool, which has a
small 3 inch Gerber Paraframe knife, Shortcut folding
scissors and military style can opener, on my belt. I
also keep a lighter or two in my pocket along with my
keys which have the LED flashlight ($5 Dorcy AAA from
Wal-Mart).
The kit moves from waist pouch to jacket to vest, etc
as need dictates. I put it in the Ziploc bags to
demonstrate the size of the kit. The two biggest items
in the kit are the water bottle and the safety goggles,
although items can be packed into the goggles.
You may want to consider adding the following if there
is room:
- spoon, lexan/plastic (does not set off metal
detectors)
- folding city/state map
- a small folding mesh or nylon duffel/backpack (for
anything that is found)
- small tube of Vaseline (help safety goggles seal to
your face)
- small tube of sun screen
- water tabs
- sport bottle type water filter
- parachute cord (10 feet)
- sardine can type/size survival kit
- disposable poncho or garbage bags
The knife or multi-tool can be kept on your belt or in
your pocket, as can the lighter, keychain LED and sun
glasses. A bandana can be kept in your back pocket and
the military style can opener on your keychain. This
will free up some room in your kit for other things
If you spend all day at a desk then you can keep a few
things in your desk drawer, or in your locker if in a
factory, like a polar fleece pull over or light jacket,
running shoes or hiking boots, spare socks, pair of
jeans, t-shirt, long sleeve shirt, some extra food,
bottled water and maybe a fleece throw in a small gym
type duffel. Grab the duffel and survival kit and get
moving until you have time to change. Many office
workers keep a small gym type duffelat their desk with
shoes and athletic gear for when they go to the gym
during lunch or after work. Many office workers can be
seen on the public transit systems with a
briefcase/laptop bag and a gym duffel.
The idea behind a mini urban kit is not to keep you
alive in the woods, but to get you out of buildings and
to your car, on your way home, or to safety. When you
think about it, most of the items on the list are
fairly common items that we see many office people
with. These should not attract any attention, but can
make the difference between life and death or reduced
injury.
If you do not have room to keep a spare pair of shoes
make sure that whatever shoes you do wear have a good
rubber sole and are comfortable for walking. With some
looking you can find shoes that meet these requirements
and remain appropriate for dress wear.
For those times when a waist pack or small duffel is
inconvenient or not allowed you could get yourself a
photographer's or fisherman's vest with multiple
pockets. If you're getting a fishing vest and plan on
wearing it in the city you may want to carefully remove
the fly patch. You wouldn't come close to using all of
the pockets on the vest and your items would be with
you at all times.
You can see pictures of my vest with the Urban Survival
Kit contents above in it.
Front view

Contents of the pockets:
1 - headphones
2 - Bic lighter & spoon
3 - EMPTY
4 - water bottle
5 - EMPTY
6 - EMPTY
7 - EMPTY
8 - 2 chocolate bars
Rear view

In the rear "Poacher's Pocket" is the windbreaker.
Inside view

Contents of the pockets:
1 - EMPTY
2 - pen
3 - duct tape and survival ("space") blanket
4 - Gerber Pouch
5 - travel pack of "wet ones"
6 - leather work gloves & bandanna
7 - first aid kit
8 - EMPTY
9 - radio
10 - waterproof match case/whistle/compass
11 - EMPTY
Front view with windbreaker over vest (zippered)

Front view with windbreaker over vest (unzippered)

Below are examples of other vests -
a fisherman's vest and a photographer's vest, both are
very similar and they usually have around 20 pockets to
keep your stuff in.
Fishing Vest

Photographer's Vest

Another option for outerwear is a safari jacket. It has
less pockets than a vest, but will have enough to keep
your mini urban kit in. Below are a couple of examples
of safari jackets from Cabela's (www.cabela's.com).


If you want dressy with more pockets then consider a
jacket from Tilley Endurables (www.tilley.com), these
are more expensive but have a reputation for long life
and toughness along with up to 10 pockets on the dress
styles. They also have safari and women's styles as
well. Below are the two men's dressy jackets.


As you can see, no matter the situation or surroundings
you find yourself in there is an option that will allow
you to keep your mini urban kit, or at least most of
it, with you at all times. For dressy situations you
will have to expend more money, but that is the price
you pay for having your kit with you in the board room.
Original at: http://blogs.survivalistssite.com/blog/canuck.php?itemid=45#more