[ad_1]
Hurricane Ian dramatically changed our coastlines, damaged homes and caused serious flooding when it struck Florida in 2022.Oregon State University researchers looked at Hurricane Ian’s impact on coastal communities and saw an opportunity to investigate storm surges and how to protect people’s homes. “So those houses are 1:3, which means everything is dramatically three times smaller than the real house… but also the response of the house, how it’s broken and how is damages is also scaled properly to represent what happens in nature,” Pedro Lomonaco, director of the Hinsdale Wave Research Lab, said.It’s all about seeing how houses in coastal communities hold up to storm surge.”We build those in our directional wave basin. Our directional wave basin is imagined like an Olympic-size swimming pool where we can generate wave,” Lomonaco said. The researchers replicated waves as close as possible to what you find in nature with increasing storm surges. One house was built to meet the 100-year-flood standard which is the current FEMA guideline. Another was built to a 500-year-standard and sits higher above the water.The researchers increased the wave strength every 15 minutes until the houses collapsed.“The houses that are lower are going to be affected by waves sooner, and they are going to be damaged sooner. And the higher elevation houses are going to be more resilient and more resistant to those storm surge and wave,” Lomonaco said. Lomonaco says they’re still processing all the data; however, the information can be helpful in the future.The researchers are still processing all of the data from the experiment, but Lomonaco believes this research will be helpful in the future.He added that awareness is one of the main takeaways from the experiment, “We have to accept that we have placed the houses in the wrong place is the first point. and we allowed the construction of houses in places that were too risky and now we’re paying the price of that.”He acknowledged that this may not be the popular answer, but people may need to move their houses to places which are safer.Lomonaco anticipates the experiment’s results could be incorporated into building codes and where houses are built.
Hurricane Ian dramatically changed our coastlines, damaged homes and caused serious flooding when it struck Florida in 2022.
Oregon State University researchers looked at Hurricane Ian’s impact on coastal communities and saw an opportunity to investigate storm surges and how to protect people’s homes.
“So those houses are 1:3, which means everything is dramatically three times smaller than the real house… but also the response of the house, how it’s broken and how is damages is also scaled properly to represent what happens in nature,” Pedro Lomonaco, director of the Hinsdale Wave Research Lab, said.
It’s all about seeing how houses in coastal communities hold up to storm surge.
“We build those in our directional wave basin. Our directional wave basin is imagined like an Olympic-size swimming pool where we can generate wave,” Lomonaco said.
The researchers replicated waves as close as possible to what you find in nature with increasing storm surges.
One house was built to meet the 100-year-flood standard which is the current FEMA guideline. Another was built to a 500-year-standard and sits higher above the water.
The researchers increased the wave strength every 15 minutes until the houses collapsed.
“The houses that are lower are going to be affected by waves sooner, and they are going to be damaged sooner. And the higher elevation houses are going to be more resilient and more resistant to those storm surge and wave,” Lomonaco said.
Lomonaco says they’re still processing all the data; however, the information can be helpful in the future.
The researchers are still processing all of the data from the experiment, but Lomonaco believes this research will be helpful in the future.
He added that awareness is one of the main takeaways from the experiment, “We have to accept that we have placed the houses in the wrong place is the first point. and we allowed the construction of houses in places that were too risky and now we’re paying the price of that.”
He acknowledged that this may not be the popular answer, but people may need to move their houses to places which are safer.
Lomonaco anticipates the experiment’s results could be incorporated into building codes and where houses are built.
[ad_2]














