When Midwest residents suffered through nearly 100 tornadoes in early
May, lives were lost in many cases because homes weren't adequately
designed to withstand the fierce winds or to protect against flying debris.
In tornado-risk areas,
homes are built only to codes that consider minimum, code-approved "design
winds" much less severe than those of tornadoes or hurricanes.
Various building techniques have attempted
to address the problem, but the federal government hasn't sanctioned any
design -- until now.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) "Taking Shelter from the
Storm: Building a Safe Room Inside Your House" is a 28-page on-line guide to
construction plans, materials, designs and cost estimates for several types of
tornado "safe rooms" you can build inside your existing or new home.
While you can't actually tornado-proof your home, the safe rooms are designed
to remain standing to protect you and your family from injury caused by severe
winds and life-threatening flying debris even if the rest of the home is
severely damaged.
When constructed according to the plans, the safe rooms provide protection
against winds of up to 250 miles per hour and against 100 mile-per-hour
projectiles, according to FEMA Director James Witt. Such wind speeds are
rarely exceeded in the United States so the rooms protect their inhabitants
against virtually any injury.
With recommendations for both new and existing homes with various types of
foundations, the plans call for small (maximum 64 square feet) reinforced
wood-frame, concrete or masonry rooms that cost only $3,000 to $6,000 in a new
home and 20 percent more to retrofit an existing home.
The guide book includes a worksheet to help you determine your risk based on
your home's location and design. It goes on to recommend the best location in
your home for a safe room and the best safe room floor plan for your home. The
guide also helps you and your contractor plan the shelter.
The FEMA guide draws on 25 years of research by the Lubbock, TX-based Wind Engineering Research
Center at Texas Tech University.
A devastating tornado that struck Lubbock on May 11, 1970 created an instant
laboratory for studying the effects of tornadic wind on structures. Since that
time, center scientists have made on-site investigations of more than 70
extreme wind events in 14 states plus Mexico, Puerto Rico, Guam, and Australia.
If you don't have Web access to the FEMA Tornado Safe Room page, call FEMA
toll-free at (888) 565-3896.
Also See:
Home Warranties: Are They Worth It?
FEMA: What Is It, How Do You Qualify
Federal Disaster Aid: What is it? How Do You Get It?
Safe in the Eye of the Storm: Concrete Form Housing
Published: July 16, 1999
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