there's the "thornton castling trap" which gary lane talks about in his books.
0-0-0

There is no rule that says you must castle short if the opponent does. Of course you can also wait for the opponent to go 0-0-0 and then go the other way. The effect is the same. I have done this many times if I didn't know what else to play. It's a crude but often effective strategy. So here are some known ones for white:
In the Pirc, you might do it. But it's tricky.
The Saemisch (f3 line) of the KID.
Most open Sicilians have a sharp line, like the Yugoslav (Dragon) and the English attack. (Najdorf)
Some lines of the Queen's gambit, like the exchange lines with cxd and sometimes Bf4. It can also apply to some sharp lines where you play g4 with white anyway.
The Caro-Kann, especially if you played h4 anyway.
The Scandinavian, though good chance black follows you.
Some old Stonewall lines where white doesn't castle at all or plays 0-0-0 to bring the a1 rook in last minute. That is if white sets up a Stonewall, if black does it which is more common, is the same story.
For black:
Certain lines of the French, even in the Winawer where the b-file is half open.
The French exchange, if you get bored otherwise anyway.
There are more cases but mostly this is to follow white, so the all in pawnstorm does not happen or is much more tricky. You may know in the Spanish (white) and the KID (black) the pawn storm may come anyway, though it exposes the own king.
Hey everyone yesterday while playing a very intense game with someone at my college I stumbled upon a ferocious attack by using 0-0-0. It was so strong that even though I was down a rook and a knight I still remained far ahead in tempo and through a series of pins with his king, was able to capture material and force a resignation.
So I was wondering if anyone new any openings that specifically end up in 0-0-0, for white and black. I dont exactly know where to begin in the opening databases.
Thanks