Wind Load Impact on Tall Buildings During Severe Wind Events

Wind Load Impact on Tall Buildings During Severe Wind Events

Wind Load Impact on Tall Buildings During Severe Wind Events

Meteorology Matters looks at the performance of tall building facades under severe wind conditions, focusing on damage observations from recent events (May-July 2024) including a derecho and Hurricane Beryl in Houston, Texas. The study combines real-world damage assessments with wind tunnel simulations conducted at the NSF NHERI Wall of Wind Experimental Facility to understand the factors contributing to facade failures. A key finding is that non-hurricane wind events, like derechos and downbursts, can cause significant localized damage due to wind channeling effects in urban areas and the unique characteristics of these wind events. The research highlights the need for reassessing wind load design criteria for tall buildings to account for these factors.

Key Themes and Ideas:

  • Increased Vulnerability of Tall Buildings: The article emphasizes the growing number of tall buildings in urban environments and their inherent vulnerability to extreme wind events.
  • "As urbanization accelerates, the construction of tall buildings has surged, becoming a defining feature of modern cityscapes... Tall buildings, while contributing to economic growth and urban development, face substantial risks from extreme wind events, such as hurricanes and downbursts."
  • Impact of Non-Hurricane Wind Events: A core argument is that localized convective systems like derechos and downbursts pose a significant threat to tall building facades, sometimes causing more damage than hurricanes with comparable wind speeds.
  • "localized convective systems such as derecho and downbursts rank among the most formidable natural forces capable of inflicting severe damage on tall structures."
  • "Comparing the observations in both events, the damage resulted from the derecho was more severe than that resulted from the hurricane, despite comparable gust speeds."
  • Wind Channeling in Urban Areas: The study identifies wind channeling in densely built urban environments as a critical factor in facade damage. The interaction of wind forces with surrounding buildings can amplify pressures on specific facades.
  • "...critical vulnerabilities in tall building façades, particularly in relation to wind channeling effects in densely built urban areas."
  • "As observed, channelling effects in dense urban environment might have a significant consequence on the wind-induced local pressures and have contributed to the damage observed in Houston during the derecho."
  • Need for Reassessing Wind Load Design: The research suggests that current wind load design criteria may not adequately account for the complexities of wind behavior in urban areas, especially concerning non-hurricane events.
  • "...underscore the need for a reassessment of wind effects on tall buildings to better reflect the complex interactions between wind forces and urban environments."
  • Wind Tunnel Testing Methodology: The study uses wind tunnel simulations at the NHERI Wall of Wind Experimental Facility to investigate wind loads on tall building models under both atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) and downburst wind conditions. The wind tunnel is equipped with a 12-fan system simulating Category 5 hurricane conditions.

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Hurricane Ian: Investigation Shows Homeowners Insurance Companies Not Paying Up After 2 Years

Hurricane Ian: Investigation Shows Homeowners Insurance Companies Not Paying Up After 2 Years

A 60 Minutes report on insurer fraud in Florida following Hurricane Ian shows that numerous companies have systematically changed reports in order to deny homeowners of up to 90% of the payment they deserve after catastrophic losses. It focuses on the claims of several licensed adjusters, who allege that insurance carriers were purposefully altering damage reports to reduce payouts to homeowners. These adjusters claim that their reports were edited by desk adjusters who had never even visited the damaged properties, reducing the amount of money the homeowners received. The report alleges that this practice was widespread, affecting many homeowners who were left with significant damage and insufficient funds to repair their homes… and are still awaiting justice even today. While these charges have been presented to the Florida Attorney General’s office, they have failed to prosecute 2 years after Ian struck Southwest Florida in 2022.

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Asheville - Climate Change “Safe Haven”?

Asheville - Climate Change “Safe Haven”?

We explore the devastating floods that hit Asheville, North Carolina, after Hurricane Helene, challenging the city's former reputation as a "climate haven." It explains that climate change is making intense rainfall events more frequent and severe, leaving even high-elevation areas vulnerable. Climate change is exacerbating flooding risks across the United States, including in Appalachia, where the terrain amplifies the impact of heavy rains. We also compare the recent floods to the "Great Flood" of 1916, highlighting the catastrophic devastation caused by heavy rainfall and emphasizing the historical context of similar events in the region. Damage from Helene is extensive, causing significant problems with infrastructure and prompting relief efforts as the full extent of the impact still remains unknown.

3 Okt 202410min

What’s Your Flood Risk? Tools to Help you Determine

What’s Your Flood Risk? Tools to Help you Determine

How to determine flood risk for properties in the United States. Yale Climate brings us tools and resources, categorized by the type of information they provide, and it critiques the accuracy and limitations of each. These tools are essential in an era of increasing flood risk due to climate change. We discuss the new Risk Rating 2.0 system implemented by the National Flood Insurance Program, which aims to ensure future payouts do not exceed premiums.

3 Okt 202411min

Hurricane Helene - Bomb after the Lull

Hurricane Helene - Bomb after the Lull

The 2024 Atlantic Hurricane season began as a beast with Hurricane Beryl setting the stage for what was predicted to be an overactive hurricane season. With an August and early September peak season lull, forecasters were questioning the reasoning for the season bottoming out. Then intro Hurricane Helene. Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida as a category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 140 mph and a storm surge of 20 feet causing not only one of the highest surges seen in the state of Florida, but also some of the highest storm surge ever recorded in the Tampa Bay Area. As a weakening storm system, Helene continued to dump excess amounts of rain through parts of Georgia and Appalachia, causing serious flash flooding that has caused the death toll to spike in recent days as rescuers scramble to sift through the destruction. Some people are wondering how a warming climate may have been a factor in supercharging Helene

3 Okt 202411min

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