Building codes
Oct. 25th, 2007 11:30 amThe picture on the front page, above the fold, of today's Times shows a block of destroyed houses, with one house on the block still standing. (The closest shot I could find on the Times online appears to be from the same street, but shows more houses still standing.)
Since periodic wildfires are apparently common to SoCal, one wonders why the insurance companies and building codes don't require houses to be built to withstand these fires, since it appears to be possible. Or is this a case where the fire "jumped over" a house that was built the same way as the others in the development?
Since periodic wildfires are apparently common to SoCal, one wonders why the insurance companies and building codes don't require houses to be built to withstand these fires, since it appears to be possible. Or is this a case where the fire "jumped over" a house that was built the same way as the others in the development?
(no subject)
Date: 2007-10-25 04:33 pm (UTC)As for fire vs quake: Any fireproof building material is either going to be heavy, brittle, of a undetermined toxicity or have some other issue with it that will make it bad for quakes. Any quake proof stuff is going to be soft enough to melt or catch fire. The two are mostly exclusive of each other. One day someone will figure something out but by then we will have solved the whole problem by getting enough water in the desert so that these fire issues aren't so much of an issue.
The solid wall of flame idea isn't possible in SoCal. It happens in the great plains where the winds always moved in the same direction and the land is flat. But in SoCal there are lots of hills and canyons. These hills and canyons do strange things to the winds that come out of the mountains (the Santa Anna winds). Hot air rises and cold air settles. With the varied geography of the area the winds push the fires around in unpredictable ways. The media doesn't want to explain that. They just want you to stay tuned for more.
I was there during the 2003 fires and was sorry to miss this batch, I just couldn't afford to live in CA any more. 1 million people evacuated and a fair number of friends were among them. They don't know if they have houses to go home to.