This hurricane-proof home can withstand powerful storms

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Published 2017-11-08
North Carolina-based prefab home builder Deltec has designed a home that’s built to withstand hurricanes. In the season finale of Home of the Future, The Verge and Curbed show you how one Deltec home fared against Hurricane Harvey this past summer.
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All Comments (21)
  • @andreglud
    It actually looks really cozy with those circular rooms.
  • I worked for Deltec 30 years ago. They really are well built homes. Like beautiful tanks.
  • @district5198
    Should be mandatory in building codes. Stronger and consistently updated building codes. Is a must.
  • @astrinymris9953
    Way back in 1989, right after Hurricane Hugo, I saw a photo of the coast showing piles of rubble which used to be a housing development, with this one geodesic dome standing apparently undamaged. Round homes work.
  • Imagine the headaches you'd save by using idk concrete, brick ect.
  • @user-mj5ss3vw4g
    Its all about aerodynamics. If you are redirecting the wind instead of taking the full force head on even weak materials can survive.The only problem with weak materials like wood is flying debris
  • @Dudeldani
    This is incredibly cool. I study spatial planning in Delta regions and this type of housing is a low cost solution to a complex problemany regions face in the coming years. Brilliant.
  • Yep, stucco frame homes. Florida learned its lesson after Andrew. They coded out stucco built homes, and went back to re-enforced concrete block, with hip roofs and roof straps. Add a full size, full load, built in generator, and if possible a well, with a water treatment system, you’re pretty much as safe as you can be. Add roll down aluminum shutters that lock in place and ride it out. Also consider location, don’t build next to a river, or right on the damn beach. Also, water dams work amazingly well. With the latest elevation requirements, roof codes and footer thickness codes, houses today, can stand up to a hurricane. House built in the 70’s and 80’s not so much, especially if they have gable roofs. They tend to get ripped off.
  • @grabeeg1
    Why don't use strong construction materials like Cement?
  • @TMB-cv2bg
    Most concrete structure homes in Trinidad where I'm from are built to withstand strong winds.
  • All the houses in Puerto Rico built from concrete with concrete roofs made it through Maria just fine. A round wooden house is more resistant to wind but can't come near concrete no matter what you do to it.
  • So nothing about price? Construction time? Comparison with other designs? This is basically just an ad.
  • @RBFR01
    If the house beams were made of steel and or aluminium it would be even stronger also you could bolt the house to a concrete platform.
  • @TiesSepGames
    just build your houses from strong materials, and not from foam and toothpicks like 90% of murica
  • @gamesmaker1
    Just don't make them out of wood, has the tale of the 3 piglets and the wolf taught nothing?
  • @nicholas8nj
    Amazing concept of building a house to protect you from hurricanes and tornadoes should be used moreso for infrastructure and human life protecting. 🍀
  • @c.akuawright5884
    There's one built in McCrogan SC back in 2003, the owner had to instruct the builder on how to construct it. It withstood Hurricane Matthew and Florence, I was in it only lost power, not one shingle was gone. I witness the power of wind coming out of the west and going through the trees, laying them on their side and nothing happened to me. Mother is a Beast!!!!