Guide to finding and preparing shelters in Israel, including mamad (apartment safe room), mamak (floor safe room), maman (institutional safe room), and miklat (public shelter). Use when a user needs to find the nearest shelter, prepare a safe room according to Home Front Command guidelines, understand time-to-shelter by region, set up workplace emergency procedures, or learn the Israeli shelter system as a new immigrant. Covers building regulations since 1992, municipal shelter databases, shelter preparation checklists, accessibility for people with disabilities, stairwell protocols for buildings without mamad, and what to do if caught outdoors. Helps users protect themselves and their families during rocket alerts, especially those unfamiliar with the system. Do NOT use for building alert integrations (use pikud-haoref-alerts), for safety protocol instructions per alert type (use pikud-haoref-safety-protocols), or for non-Israeli emergency shelter systems.
This skill provides comprehensive guidance on finding, preparing, and using shelters in Israel during emergencies.
Israel has four types of protected spaces, each designated by a Hebrew acronym:
| Type | Hebrew | Full Name | Location | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mamad (ממ"ד) | מרחב מוגן דירתי | Apartment Protected Space | Inside individual apartments | Most common in buildings built after 1992 |
| Mamak (ממ"ק) | מרחב מוגן קומתי | Floor Protected Space | Shared space on each floor | Older buildings retrofitted with floor-level shelters |
| Maman (ממ"מ) | מרחב מוגן מוסדי | Institutional Protected Space | Schools, offices, public institutions | Workplaces and educational facilities |
| Miklat (מקלט) | מקלט ציבורי | Public Shelter | Underground or standalone structures |
| Parks, community centers, public spaces |
Since 1992, Israeli building code requires all new residential construction to include a mamad. Buildings constructed before 1992 may lack a mamad entirely.
When a siren sounds, you have a limited number of seconds to reach a protected space. This varies by proximity to threat origins:
| Region | Time to Shelter | Example Cities |
|---|---|---|
| Gaza envelope | 0-15 seconds | Nir Am, Be'eri, Kissufim |
| Western Negev | 15-30 seconds | Sderot, Netivot |
| Southern coast | 30 seconds | Ashkelon |
| Central Negev | 45 seconds | Ofakim, Kiryat Gat |
| Southern cities | 60 seconds | Ashdod, Be'er Sheva |
| Central Israel | 90 seconds | Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, Netanya |
| Haifa area | 60-90 seconds | Haifa, Krayot |
| Upper Galilee / Golan | Up to 180 seconds | Kiryat Shmona, Metula |
How to check your zone: Visit the Home Front Command website (oref.org.il) and enter your location name in Hebrew or English, or use the Home Front Command app.
If your mamad has an NBC filtration system:
If your building was built before 1992 and has no mamad:
When a siren sounds and you cannot reach a shelter in time:
Mamad as storage: Most families use the mamad for storage, making it impossible to enter quickly. The single most common failure is not being able to close the blast door because of furniture or boxes blocking it. An unusable mamad is the same as having no mamad.
Stairwell floor confusion: The "not top or bottom floor" rule means the structural floor, not your apartment floor. In a 4-story building, sit on the stairs between floors 1-3, not on the roof stairwell or the ground-floor entrance area.
Time-to-shelter is absolute: 15 seconds means 15 seconds from siren to closed door. If the nearest miklat is a 2-minute walk, you cannot use it in a 30-second zone. Know your actual transit time, not the theoretical distance.
Public shelter locked: Municipal miklat shelters are sometimes locked during non-emergency periods. They should be opened by local authorities when the security situation escalates. If you find a locked shelter during an alert, report it to your municipality and seek the next closest option.
NBC filters need maintenance: Gas mask filters and NBC systems expire. An expired filter provides zero protection. Check expiration dates annually.
See the references/ directory for:
references/shelter-preparation-checklist.md -- printable preparation checklistreferences/shelter-types-comparison.md -- detailed comparison of shelter types| Source | URL | What to Check |
|---|---|---|
| Home Front Command (Pikud HaOref) | https://www.oref.org.il/eng | Protected space specifications, shelter types, occupancy limits |
| Israel Planning Administration | https://www.gov.il/he/departments/planning_authority | Building code TAMA 38, mamad requirements, public shelter construction |
| Ministry of Interior - local authorities | https://www.gov.il/he/departments/ministry_of_interior | Public shelter registry, municipal shelter maintenance responsibilities |
| Civil Defense Regulations (Knesset) | https://main.knesset.gov.il/Activity/Legislation/Laws/Pages/default.aspx | Civil Defense Law, shelter-by-law (takanot ha-hitgonenut) |
| Kol Zchut - shelters | https://www.kolzchut.org.il/he/שימוש_במקלט_בבית_משותף | Tenant rights, landlord obligations, shared shelter access rules |
| Problem | Solution |
|---|---|
| Mamad door won't close | Check for obstruction. Lubricate hinges with WD-40 or similar. If structurally damaged, contact your building committee to arrange repair |
| Can't find public shelter | Use miklat.app or call 104. Ask neighbors or the vaad bayit (building committee) |
| Don't know my time-to-shelter zone | Visit oref.org.il, enter your city name. Or call 104 |
| Building has no shelter at all | Use interior stairwell protocol. Consider installing a private mamad (consult licensed contractor) |
| Shelter is inaccessible (wheelchair) | Contact your municipality for accessible shelter locations. Register with Home Front Command via 104 |