Florida is all over the map when it comes to hurricane prep. My house was built in the late 70s, first one in the first neighborhood in the area. It's pretty much all cinderblock, and you'd need a truck to breach it. The main vulnerability (other than windows, which you just board up) is that the Florida room (for those uninitiated, a sort of den with large windows to give a good view of the outside while staying inside) is actually built slightly lower than ground level. So when the rains hit, it floods. We have a sump pump specifically to keep the backyard drained, but it can easily get clogged with weeds. Thankfully it's only flooded once in the history of the house, back in the 2004 spree of hurricanes. We prevented it later by hanging a gigantic tarp from the roof that stretched over the yard to catch the water. It was a cartoon solution, but it worked.Ahriman238 wrote:
No mystery here, emergency prep is fucking expensive. Especially if you're talking about designing buildings from the ground up to withstand crises (earthquake, firestorm, flood, hurricane, tornado) they may never encounter. Anyone who wants to spend on this sort of safety gets ridiculed for wasting tons of money, especially while the economy's still crap, and then when something happens the same people who wouldn't or couldn't shell out demand to know how this could happen and find a scapegoat.
Happened in Florida, in New Orleans, in New York. Same old story, getting older fast.
The biggest danger here is the tree cover. Florida has a ton of trees, and big ones. A lot of the older neighborhoods kept most of the forest when they started developing, back before the McMansion craze, so my own front yard has three huge trees with thick trunks. There's another one in the backyard, though it's bending into the NEIGHBOR'S yard. Either way, they can do serious damage if they fall. I'm talking "Our house has been bisected" or "Your car is no longer a car" damage.