Sea Skimmer wrote:Somewhere like 1.4 million bucks in 1985, but that's including stuff you don't need...
An actual above ground tornado shelter would just be built lower and longer, which is more or less exactly how a lot of surface built air raid shelters were made in WW2 anyway...
Agreed. So, price tag
estimate for a tornado shelter capable of holding several hundred children would be, what... I'm going to just vaguely eyeball it at a few hundred thousand dollars? Somewhere between 200 and 500, that is?
And yes, certain people blatantly were trying to argue that aboveground shelters were not possible.
Personally I think that if they were then, they aren't now, in light of what's actually been demonstrated. Or at least I
hope not now that the issue has been laid out and people have had time to think.
If I'm wrong, then I guess I'm just plain wrong.
There's a reason someone might come to this conversation thinking "it's impossible," when in fact that is not true- because few if any such reinforced, EF5-proof shelters
exist. On page two, you have Broomstick talking about Anderson shelters. By the standards of tornado shelter that actually exist, relying on something like an Anderson shelter is apparently considered realistic. It was a good shelter choice during the Blitz, against conventional weapons typically no larger than 1000-pound bombs, too.
By the standards of surviving nuclear blast, it's comical.
And it looks like to survive an EF5, you need something at least built to the same approximate scale as for a hardened installation designed to survive multiple psi of overpressure.
So if your experience is with real anti-tornado shelters because you live in the Midwest, and you are NOT familiar with work done on hardening aircraft revetments against nuclear attack, you might very well think "tornadoes are so destructive they can destroy any above ground shelter." Because your definition of "above ground shelter" includes things like the Anderson shelter, or some of the 1950s civil defense 'fallout shelters,' but not anything hardened against serious overpressure.
The issue is really not one of cost anyway, its just the general US mentality of civil defense is duck and cover nonsense at work, followed by people howling when a disaster occurs, and then dropping back into a cycle of not caring. it happens over and over again.
I totally agree. This is going to be doubly true in a place like modern Oklahoma, where I suspect that the current crop of government leaders will be back to reflexively opposing any kind of infrastructure spending including disaster hardening within a matter of months.
Hell even a very weak shelter is damn useful in an EF5 tornado anyway, the damage path of the maximum winds is far smaller then the radius over which wooden houses will be totally destroyed.
I totally agree.