The storm is still raging, it's nowhere near done, and already Port Arthur, Cameron, and Lake Charles are battered and heavily damaged.
IIRC there's one or two, but I don't remember who or if they're active... Maybe it was Eacaraxe?I know we have a few from Texas who already chimed in. Do we have any people in Louisiana?
Nah, we had the first bits of remnant earlier today, and are about an hour or two from getting the rest here. We're not under any warnings, though we should probably be under a flash flood warning and wind advisory. It won't be as bad as Ike here.IIRC there's one or two, but I don't remember who or if they're active... Maybe it was Eacaraxe?
There are architects and engineers working on that but it's a different set of challenges from designing for earthquakes. High-speed winds, all the detritus getting whipped along with them, flooding... total fustercluck. I recall a decade or so ago seeing prototype houses with ovoid shapes that let the winds flow around it with less resistance, but I don't think the idea ever caught on.Surely there's some kind of house design we should be implementing for buildings in states that get hit by hurricanes every year? I know saying that will sound stupid to everyone that has to deal with this but Japan has buildings designed specifically to deal with earthquakes, surely there's some design we could use that would make it so people and businesses didn't have to rebuild almost every year. Maybe I'm just being naive...
Yea there are. In fact we had Dutch engineers come over and try to help us with it and just wound up shaking their heads in disbelief at how dangerous the practices were that the US chose to go with instead because it was cheaper. The problem is cost and the people can't afford it, the government refuses to and insurers wont pay for it to be built properly so we still wind up building shit over and over and endangering peoples lives.Surely there's some kind of house design we should be implementing for buildings in states that get hit by hurricanes every year? I know saying that will sound stupid to everyone that has to deal with this but Japan has buildings designed specifically to deal with earthquakes, surely there's some design we could use that would make it so people and businesses didn't have to rebuild almost every year. Maybe I'm just being naive...
I'm glad everyone here seems to be doing ok at least.
They have it figured out, the problem of course is cost. No one is willing to pay for it. The few that do pay for it, their homes survive.There are architects and engineers working on that but it's a different set of challenges from designing for earthquakes. High-speed winds, all the detritus getting whipped along with them, flooding... total fustercluck. I recall a decade or so ago seeing prototype houses with ovoid shapes that let the winds flow around it with less resistance, but I don't think the idea ever caught on.