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SecurityMarch 5, 2026

Station70 origin story

RS
Raz SchenirerStation70

In the world of digital assets, security is often treated as a static goal. A fence to be built or a lock to be turned. At Station70, we view security through a different lens. Our name is rooted in a historical moment where engineering was put to the ultimate test.

The lesson of Castle Bravo

On March 1, 1954, at Bikini Atoll, the United States conducted the Castle Bravo nuclear test. It was meant to be a controlled experiment, with scientists predicting a yield of approximately six megatons.

Due to a miscalculation in the behavior of lithium isotopes, the blast ignited with a staggering 15 megatons of force, nearly three times the expected power. It remains the largest nuclear detonation in US history. As the fireball expanded far beyond the predicted safety zones, the personnel stationed nearby faced a terrifying reality: they had underestimated the forces they sought to harness.

They retreated to their observation bunker: Station 70.

The strength of the bunker

Station 70 was a reinforced concrete bunker designed to withstand the expected. When the unexpected arrived, a blast that vaporized islands and defied every scientific projection of the time, the scientists inside Station 70 survived. The structure held. It became a sanctuary not just against an external threat, but against an enormous human error.

Built for the miscalculation

When founder Adam Healy named Station70, he did so with a specific philosophy in mind. In the high stakes ecosystem of institutional digital assets, the greatest threats often come from the unforeseen: the wallet outages, technical bugs, and human errors that bypass traditional defenses.

Station70 was built to be that bunker for the modern era. Just as the original Station 70 bunker was over engineered for survival, Station70 provides the institutional grade backup and recovery layers necessary to protect assets when primary systems fail.

Why we started Station70

Adam Healy spent eight years watching companies struggle, and repeatedly fail, to solve disaster recovery. As a former CISO at BlockFi and Bakkt, Adam was not just watching the industry evolve. He was actively auditing the tools and systems being used. He saw CFOs pour millions into in house solutions that did not work, CROs lose sleep over unaudited backup providers, and hedge funds storing billions on USB drives like it was 2005.

Adam saw a gap in the market and, together with co-founder Dr. Adam Everspaugh and Head of Product Nathan Bekerman, set out to solve it.

Station70 was built by security, for security. Industry leaders immediately recognized the value, not because of a pitch, but because they had already experienced the cost and risk of trying to build institutional grade recovery infrastructure themselves. Solving disaster recovery properly required purpose built solutions from people who lived the problem. That is exactly what Station70 set out to do, and did.

Security for what you can least afford to loseLearn how Station70 protects keys, identities, and access.
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