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Building Performance - Hurricane Andrew in Florida - Observations, Recommendations, and Technical Guidance (Paperback)
Loot Price: R541
Discovery Miles 5 410
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Building Performance - Hurricane Andrew in Florida - Observations, Recommendations, and Technical Guidance (Paperback)
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Loot Price R541
Discovery Miles 5 410
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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On August 24, 1992, Hurricane Andrew struck southern Dade County,
Florida, generating high winds and rain over a vast area of the
county. Although the storm produced high winds and high storm
surge, the effects of the storm surge and wave action were limited
to a relatively small area of the coastal floodplain. It was
evident from the extensive damage caused by wind, however, that
wind speeds are significant. In September 1992, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA's) Federal Insurance
Administration (FIA), at the request of the FEMA Disaster Field
Office Staff, assembled a Building Performance Assessment Team. The
task of the team was to survey the performance of residential
buildings in the storm's path and to provide findings and
recommendations to both the Interagency Hazard Mitigation Team and
the Dade County Building Code Task Force. The basis for performing
the survey is that better performance of building systems can be
expected when causes of observed failures are corrected using
recognized standards of design and construction. The assessment
team developed recommendations for reducing future hurricane damage
such as that resulting from Hurricane Andrew. Recommendations
included areas of concern such as building materials, construction
techniques, code compliance, quality of construction, plan review,
inspection, and reconstruction/retrofit efforts. The
recommendations presented in this report may also have application
in other communities in Florida. This report presents the team's
observations of the successes and failures of buildings in
withstanding the effects of Hurricane Andrew, comments on building
failure modes, and provides recommendations for improvements
intended to enhance the performance of buildings in future
hurricanes.
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