MIT
researchers design tool to help builders build storm-resistant buildings
Anne Wilson Yu | Concrete Sustainability Hub
The Atlantic hurricane season has officially begun and the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is predicting “above normal” storm activity this year.
That could mean significant damage to
coastal communities — some of which are still recovering from last year’s
hurricane season.
As officials in hurricane-prone communities are calling on
residents to be prepared for upcoming storms, researchers with the MIT
Concrete Sustainability Hub (CSHub) are
encouraging officials to make preparation a priority from the very earliest
stages of building design, starting with data-driven changes to building codes.
To help, CSHub has developed a new dashboard that
lets users calculate, on a county-by-county basis, the right amount to spend up
front on hazard mitigation for residential buildings in hurricane-prone
communities along on the U.S. East and Gulf coasts.
The tool lets users determine how much can be invested in mitigation during construction while still breaking even on future repair costs, and is based on case studies that employed the CSHub’s Break-Even Mitigation Percentage (BEMP).
“Designing homes and buildings in hazard-prone areas with the
expectation that damage will occur can make communities safer and reduce the
costly repairs that follow extreme weather events,” says Jeremy Gregory,
executive director of the CSHub.
“In areas prone to natural disasters, more
spending on mitigation is absolutely justified. The BEMP helps to identify how
much extra spending is recommended, and the dashboard makes it faster and
easier to see that calculation.”
Mehdi Noori, a CSHub postdoc, is the developer behind
the dashboard and is now leading the effort. The CSHub team
introduced the BEMP calculation last year when the project was headed
by researcher T. Reed Miller, who is now a PhD student at Yale.
“Through the BEMP and the dashboard, we’re offering a more
scientific approach to support investment in hazard mitigation,” Noori
says.
The BEMP uses publicly-available data about hazards in a given
area and employs fragility curves to determine the impact of those hazards on a
given structure.
The dashboard tool allows users to calculate the
break-even cost for a change from a baseline wood design to an enhanced
concrete design for a multi-family residential building.
Noori says preliminary results of the analysis indicate that the
BEMP is higher in areas near the coasts.
In Florida’s Miami-Dade and
neighboring Monroe counties, for example, an extra amount equaling around 17 to
18 percent of initial total investment could be spent on hazard mitigation and
still result in break even costs over the lifetime of the building.
Even so,
some communities inland "would also benefit from windstorm mitigation
mechanisms,” Noori says.
Noori notes that there were 15 weather and climate disasters in
the U.S. last year that each had losses exceeding $1 billion. Losses due to
extreme weather events, including hurricanes, could again be significant this
year.
An average season produces 12 named storms of which six become
hurricanes, including three major hurricanes. According to NOAA, forecasters are predicting “a 70 percent likelihood of
11 to 17 named storms" with winds of 39 mph or higher.
Of those, five to
nine could become hurricanes with winds of 74 mph or higher, including two to
four Category 3, 4, or 5 hurricanes with winds of 111 mph or higher.
Across the country, builders make decisions about which
materials or techniques to use first with costs in mind. Although the resulting
structures are technically built to code, in many hazard-prone
communities the long-term costs of repairs and the impact of those
early decisions mean greater financial burdens for future owners and the
community at large.
“In some areas of the country, coastal communities especially,
hazard-induced maintenance costs can be significant over a building’s lifetime
— sometimes even exceeding the initial building cost,” Gregory says.
“Our
goal through this project is to drive the widespread adoption of codes that
take hazard mitigation into account. By adopting stronger codes, communities
can reduce recovery costs and also lessen the impact on human lives.”
CSHub's work also includes pavement and concrete science research
and seeks to reduce the impact of the production and use of concrete. It also
develops tools that support infrastructure decisions, including life cycle
environmental impacts, life cycle costs, and hazard resistance.
CSHub research
is supported by the Portland Cement Association and the Ready Mixed
Concrete Research and Education Foundation.