Hurricane vs. Tiny Houses
Practical Engineering
0:00 By the end of this video, one of these buildings will be knocked down
0:04 by the force of a simulated storm surge, because there’s a lot we still don’t
0:09 understand about hurricanes and their effects on buildings.
0:14 In September 2022, Hurricane Ian tore
0:17 across the Caribbean and southeastern U.S.,
0:20 leaving a trail of devastation from Cuba to the Carolinas.
0:23 It was one of the strongest and deadliest storms in modern history.
0:28 We often think of hurricanes in terms of wind and rain.
0:32 But in coastal areas, it’s the surge of seawater driven inland
0:36 by the storm that causes the most catastrophic damage.
0:39 Homes and buildings didn’t just get wet.
0:42 Many were obliterated, swept from their foundations entirely.
0:46 But unlike many storms of the past, Ian came with data, and lots of it.
0:51 Today’s tools for collecting and analyzing information
0:53 mean that even tragic disasters can lead
0:56 to really important insights into how we
0:59 can build safer and smarter in the future.
1:02 After Hurricane Ian, FEMA analyzed more than a thousand flood claims,
1:06 and what they found about building performance was remarkable.
1:09 To dig deeper, I’m here at O.H.
1:12 Hinsdale Wave Research Labratory at Oregon State University.
1:15 A team of engineers is running a one-of-a-kind experiment
1:18 to simulate storm surge and study how buildings actually respond.
1:22 They invited me here to see it
1:24 firsthand and share what they're learning with you.
1:27 I’m Grady, and this is Practical Engineering.
1:39 Everyone knows hurricanes are destructive,
1:41 but storm surge often gets underestimated,
1:44 not just by the public, but policymakers and planners too.
1:48 The damage from high winds is visually dramatic.
1:51 We see footage of roofs ripped off and trees snapping like twigs.
1:55 But just a few feet of storm surge can cause even greater damage.
2:00 And waves amplify the destruction.
2:03 If you’ve spent time in coastal areas,
2:05 you’ve probably seen homes raised on stilts.
2:07 Since the early 2000s, this has become one of the most
2:11 common construction types in flood-prone coastal zones.
2:13 The concept is straightforward:
2:15 move the living space above the reach of storm surge.
2:18 If a hurricane hits, the lower area used for parking, storage,
2:22 or access might flood, but the critical parts of the building stay dry.
2:26 All the devastating power of the waves flows through and around
2:30 the stilts instead of slamming into walls and destroying the structure.
2:34 It turns out this idea is remarkably effective.
2:37 After Hurricane Ian,
2:38 FEMA found that flood insurance claims for elevated structures in Fort
2:42 Myers averaged about one-third the cost of claims for non-elevated buildings.
2:47 That’s a staggering difference in performance.
2:50 But zoom in, and things get more complicated.
2:53 On one hand, this is pretty obvious stuff.
2:56 You don’t need a massive wave laboratory to figure out
2:58 that elevated structures survive storm surge
3:01 much better than buildings at grade.
3:03 But if you look at footage from Hurricane Ian, it paints a more nuanced picture,
3:09 because some elevated buildings didn’t fare well at all.
3:12 They weren’t all high enough to avoid the surge.
3:14 And that gets to one of the most
3:17 difficult questions in the entire field of hurricane engineering:
3:21 how tall is tall enough?
3:23 Needless to say, it is expensive to lose your home in a storm.
3:27 The conundrum is that it’s also expensive to build
3:29 your home in such a way that it can withstand one.
3:32 If it were easy, every building in Fort
3:35 Myers would be a hundred feet above sea level.
3:37 But the reality is that elevating a structure adds significant upfront cost,
3:41 and the higher you go, the higher that expense climbs.
3:45 It’s not just a cost for homeowners
3:47 but also something that’s passed down to renters.
3:50 Shifting the actual housing upwards shifts
3:53 the affordability of housing downward for everyone.
3:56 And because major hurricanes are relatively rare events,
3:59 the return on that investment comes with a lot of uncertainty,
4:04 with benefits that are invisible most of the time.
4:07 That’s one of the biggest challenges for engineers and officials.
4:10 In theory, you can design a structure that withstands anything.
4:13 But in practice, no one’s building hurricane bunkers as homes.
4:17 Codes and policies have to balance safety with economic
4:21 viability and long-term risks with the upfront cost of resilience.
4:26 Local governments want robust, resilient development,
4:29 but they also need development to happen in the first place.
4:33 Overly strict codes can scare off builders or price out developers.
4:37 And while the National Flood Insurance Program might prefer fewer claims,
4:41 stricter floodplain regulations also come with tradeoffs:
4:45 reduced property tax revenue, limited housing supply,
4:48 and the burden of compliance placed on individuals.
4:52 These decisions might seem kind of trivial at the scale of a single structure,
4:55 but when you multiply them out along developed coastlines,
4:58 the implications of each extra foot of elevation are monumental.
5:02 So what you end up with is a delicate balancing act,
5:05 shaped by competing priorities, enormous uncertainty,
5:08 and billions of dollars on the line.
5:11 Changing building codes or policies requires
5:14 buy-in from a broad array of stakeholders,
5:17 and that kind of consensus demands reliable data.
5:20 But there’s one more thing that makes this even more complicated.
5:24 Of course, “stuff getting wet” is a problem with storm surge,
5:27 but it’s more than just typical flood damage
5:30 you’re dealing with when it comes to hurricanes.
5:32 In a sense, the surge is a rise in sea level itself,
5:36 and once your home is essentially IN the ocean,
5:39 that brings wave action into play.
5:41 Forces intensify.
5:42 Structural systems are tested in ways
5:45 that ordinary flood damage doesn’t account for.
5:48 You can see why this idea of elevating structures is
5:51 one of those engineering concepts that seems obvious on the surface,
5:55 but gets way more complicated when you start looking into the details.
5:59 And that’s why we’re here.
6:00 Computer models are limited in their capabilities.
6:03 And you can’t just call up an actual hurricane
6:05 to knock over a test structure (and even if you could,
6:08 it would probably violate the ethics rules).
6:10 So we go to the next best thing: the wave lab.
6:15 The OH Hinsdale Wave Research Laboratory is one
6:18 of the largest facilities of its kind in the world.
6:21 Since the 1970s, this lab has supported cutting-edge
6:25 research into coastal engineering challenges like sediment movement,
6:29 tsunami behavior, and wave-structure interactions.
6:33 It actually has two major test beds.
6:35 This is the Large Wave Flume.
6:37 It’s used for all kinds of hydraulic experiments related to waves,
6:41 coastal structures, and erosion.
6:42 It’s basically a super-sized version of the flume
6:45 I use in a lot of my garage demos.
6:47 It can do a lot, but it
6:49 has a limitation in that it’s inherently two-dimensional.
6:51 Flow can really only move in the direction of the flume.
6:55 That’s why the lab also has this: the Directional Wave Basin.
7:00 Think of it as a wave pool turned up to eleven.
7:04 This enormous tank uses dozens of piston-driven paddles,
7:07 each with independent control, to generate complex, multi-directional waves.
7:12 You can create a single tsunami-like pulse or dial in irregular
7:16 wave trains to match the chaotic sea states found in real hurricanes.
7:21 This facility is utilized in large-scale
7:23 research projects on wave hydrodynamics, floating structures,
7:26 and devices that harness wave energy to generate electricity.
7:31 But, of course, it can also test coastal structures, like these houses.
7:36 Dr.
7:36 Dan Cox is a Coastal Engineer and Civil Engineering Professor at Oregon State.
7:41 He explained to me why they chose the basin for this experiment.
7:45 “The nice thing about the basin is,
7:48 you can look at kind of a full 3-D picture, rather than just a slice.
7:54 And I think for this set of tests, we really wanted to do an entire house,
7:59 not just a wall, you know, a bit of the foundation.
8:02 And that’s why we chose the basin for this one.”
8:05 The research team has spent months building two incredibly detailed model homes,
8:10 each one a near-perfect one-third scale replica of a real coastal house.
8:15 Each foot is equivalent to three feet in real life.
8:19 And the only difference (besides color) between them is elevation.
8:22 The green model is a foot or 30 centimeters higher up than the orange one.
8:27 That corresponds to 3 feet in the real world or roughly one meter.
8:32 In every other way, both structures are identical.
8:35 They’ve got interior walls, windows, framing details, everything.
8:38 At this scale, that means I’m about the size of an 18-foot-tall
8:43 civil engineer… which is actually something I’ve had dreams about.
8:46 One-third scale is still just a model.
8:49 But this is not a toy experiment.
8:51 The researchers have carefully accounted for all the physics involved.
8:57 The wave periods and velocities have
8:59 been adjusted to simulate full-scale conditions,
9:01 and the structures have reduced stiffness
9:04 to reflect the relative rigidity of real-world buildings.
9:08 It’s all about maintaining dynamic similarity,
9:10 a fancy term for making sure the test results
9:14 actually mean something when translated back to full size.
9:17 And that’s a tough thing to do: “On the structure side,
9:21 it’s a lot more difficult to scale the structural behavior.
9:25 So, for example, when we’re doing computer simulations,
9:28 the simulations are primarily at scale-
9:31 trying to get that difference in shaking.
9:33 The forces can generally be scaled up as well,
9:36 so we kind of know what the forces are.
9:39 But I think the mode of failure- like how this structure
9:44 failed- I’m not sure so much as like a quantitative scaling.
9:49 It’s a little bit more like qualitatively,
9:52 this is what we would expect to happen under these conditions.”
9:57 The experimental design has the waves start small and build gradually,
10:00 both in height and frequency, simulating the approach of a storm.
10:05 The goal is to observe how both
10:07 buildings respond as conditions get worse and worse.
10:10 It’s mesmerizing to watch: the wave generators churn,
10:14 sending pulse after pulse across the basin.
10:17 Within seconds, the models are surrounded by rolling water,
10:20 with each wave slapping against walls,
10:23 flowing around supports, and rebounding off the basin walls and shoreline.
10:27 Even now, researchers at the lab are measuring the behavior of the structures.
10:35 If you look carefully,
10:36 you’ll notice targets for highly specialized cameras and lidar
10:39 to carefully monitor the behavior of each structure.
10:43 Sensors placed throughout the experiment are recording everything—wave height,
10:46 velocity, pressure on the structure, accelerations, and even internal motion.
10:51 The goal is to build a detailed,
10:54 physics-based understanding of how each building absorbs
10:57 and transfers energy from the storm surge.
11:00 And that data is incredibly valuable.
11:03 For one, this expensive and elaborate test is just two buildings.
11:06 And there are a lot more types of houses in the world than that.
11:11 So this data can be used to calibrate and validate computer models,
11:15 making it easier for engineers to get
11:17 reliable answers to questions without having
11:19 to build scale buildings and put them through huge model tests like this.
11:23 And some of those questions are big ones.
11:26 When you’re looking at options for large-scale flood infrastructure,
11:29 a major part of the process is estimating
11:32 the differences in damage and loss of life between alternatives.
11:36 Again, we can’t build infrastructure, call down a hurricane,
11:39 and test it out in real life, then revise accordingly.
11:43 Even engineers shouldn’t have THAT kind of power.
11:45 So we have to be able to make predictions about how any proposal will work out.
11:51 It’s educated guessing, essentially.
11:53 But the better we understand the connections
11:56 between all the variables (wave height,
11:58 surge level, building elevation, movement, and damage),
12:02 the more educated those guesses become.
12:04 “I would say the physical model is closer to the real world.
12:08 It's the best, in a numerical simulation,
12:10 it's kind of the best we think we can do.
12:14 But- And it always looks pretty, always looks really cool.
12:17 But there’s really- you have to verify it.
12:20 You really have to show that it’s correct, not just looks cool.
12:24 And I think when we get to the laboratory,
12:28 like we’re seeing during this test, like okay, it’s not as simple as we think.
12:32 So there’s a lot more complexity, I think,
12:35 inherent in a physical model.” That’s why even
12:39 though these tests seem pretty straightforward at first,
12:41 they can have a profound impact on how we allocate public funds,
12:46 regulate floodplains, and ultimately, keep people safe.
12:49 You probably wouldn’t buy a car without giving it a test drive first;
12:53 it’s too big a financial decision to take a risk.
12:56 Imagine changing the building code or floodplain
12:59 regulations without good data to back it up.
13:03 We necessarily make high-stakes decisions about how to manage
13:06 flooding in the face of equally enormous uncertainties.
13:09 So, you can see why information like this would give more confidence
13:14 to engineers and regulators to write
13:16 building codes and improve floodplain regulations,
13:19 knowing those decisions are grounded in truth.
13:22 But it’s not just about the data.
13:24 You might have noticed that these houses aren’t just bare minimum structures.
13:28 The team has added details like roofing, window frames,
13:31 and colorful paint jobs to make them look like real buildings,
13:35 even though they don’t really affect the final results.
13:38 That’s because this test is also a communication tool.
13:41 Most people aren’t going to read the academic papers
13:44 that get published as a result of this study, but this footage tells a story.
13:50 You don’t need data to understand which of these two
13:52 structures you’d want to live in when a hurricane comes.
13:55 And the more people who take storm surge seriously,
13:59 the better the outcomes we can expect when a big storm arrives.
14:03 Each set of waves is programmed into the machine
14:06 to simulate the variability of a storm,
14:08 with the upper limit of wave amplitude increasing from one set to the next.
14:13 After four sets of waves (delivered in about an hour),
14:16 they raise the level in the basin using
14:19 this massive bathtub faucet and repeat the process.
14:21 It was actually pretty surprising how well both
14:24 models were holding up for a while there.
14:26 It’s hard to communicate in a video just how awe-inspiring
14:29 it is when the directional wave basin starts really churning.
14:33 And eventually, a particularly violent wave comes crashing into the lower house,
14:38 and we see our first damage.
14:42 You can see the wall underneath the window give way,
14:45 and now waves start penetrating into the interior of the structure.
14:49 In a real house, this would already be catastrophic damage.
14:52 But of course, they don’t stop at the first sign of damage,
14:55 and the team keeps hammering the models with more intense waves.
14:59 Over the course of the experiment,
15:01 the sea conditions just keep getting worse and worse,
15:03 and the damage to the orange house does too.
15:07 More and more of the first story of the lower house is swept away.
15:12 Waves flow through the structure and knock out
15:14 portions of the wall on the beach side,
15:16 and everybody in the room fills with eager anticipation of a total failure.
15:21 And then, something I didn’t quite expect happened.
15:24 The model seemed to almost stabilize.
15:27 The walls of the front and back of the structure were so totally
15:30 obliterated that the first floor almost began
15:33 to act like another level of stilts!
15:35 Despite the first floor being utterly wrecked,
15:38 the second story remained more or less fine for quite a while,
15:42 even as the waves got stronger.
15:43 Dan told us about a test at half this scale (one
15:46 sixth of real life scale) that had shown similar progressive damage,
15:50 but that led to collapse much earlier on: “In the previous study,
15:55 we started to see the deterioration and then very quickly,
15:59 rapidly, the entire building destroyed and I thought,
16:02 okay, well we'll see that again at larger scale,
16:04 but we didn't.” That’s one of the cool
16:06 things about moving up in scale and realism:
16:09 you learn things that aren’t always expected.
16:11 If we had cameras on every structure during Hurricane Ian,
16:15 we likely would have seen similar results- damages
16:18 from storms rarely follow a linear, progressive trend.
16:21 It comes in fits and starts.
16:23 For a while, it seemed like it might be the end of the experiment,
16:28 since the stronger waves weren’t causing more damage.
16:30 “…It was a tough problem, and I thought I knew the answer,
16:34 and it turns out I didn’t.
16:36 Little bit tough to swallow, but it also kind of highlights to me,
16:39 like, okay this is a challenge.
16:40 This is a hard problem.
16:41 So for me, you know, I’m trying to put a positive spin on it,
16:45 but I feel like that’s a success right there.
16:48 To say hey, this is more complicated than we thought.” Of course,
16:52 everyone watching (including me) and those participating in the experiment
16:56 were hoping for that final blow that would knock
16:58 the whole thing over so they could get the full
17:01 range of data needed from safe to damaged to destroyed.
17:07 And eventually, the moment came.
17:12 The waves finally won, and the lower house collapsed.
17:16 "Holy moly!" What’s probably more interesting than
17:33 that is the condition of the other house.
17:36 Take a look at that.
17:38 Almost no damage whatsoever.
17:40 This building sat in the exact same conditions
17:43 as the other house and took almost no damage.
17:46 And in a way, that’s kind of remarkable.
17:48 Because there really wasn’t that big of a difference between the two.
17:52 I said it’s expensive to elevate a structure,
17:55 but the marginal cost between the green and orange models
17:59 is almost negligible compared to the overall value of the structures.
18:04 “In talking to people about flood risk,
18:06 you know, we talk about the 100-year, 500-year.
18:09 And I think there’s a misperception that the 500-year is like 5 times bigger,
18:16 5 times worse, I have to elevate 5 times greater.
18:19 And I think just trying to show people it doesn’t take much.
18:22 Like, there was not much of a difference
18:25 in elevation between those two buildings.
18:27 The one on the right is toast.
18:29 The one on the left had a little bit of damage,
18:33 but hardly any, and that was only after we really tried to...
18:37 take the other one out.” The researchers will be
18:39 studying the data from this experiment for years to come.
18:42 But the story's pretty clear.
18:44 Same surge, same waves.
18:46 A little difference in elevation can make a huge difference
18:50 to a structure when it comes to surviving a hurricane.
18:53 You might be watching these buildings get knocked about and thinking:
18:57 “We don’t need more resilient structures in the floodplain;
18:59 we just need them to not be there in the first place.” And in many ways,
19:04 you’d be totally right.
19:05 Often, the most economical way to reduce flood
19:08 damage is to avoid building in flood prone areas,
19:11 or if development has already happened, simply to buy out property,
19:15 tear it down, and leave the land empty as a buffer.
19:19 But where’s the line between flood-prone and not,
19:22 especially when it comes to rare events like hurricanes,
19:25 where the probabilities of occurring in a year
19:27 are in the range of 1-in-100 or 1-in-500?
19:30 And if there’s not a bright line between at-risk of flooding and not,
19:35 what’s appropriate for the fringe?
19:38 The truth is that there is no catch-all solution to flooding.
19:41 We need options to accommodate the vast
19:44 array of situations where development occurs,
19:47 whether those areas are flood-prone, flood-free,
19:49 or, most importantly, somewhere in the middle.
19:52 And not just options,
19:53 but also the data to determine which of them is truly the best path forward.
19:59 Engineering is a balancing act;
20:02 we need structures that are both strong and safe,
20:06 but also affordable, easy to occupy, and maybe even architecturally pleasing.
20:10 Using knowledge gained from tests like this helps us get
20:14 a clearer definition of the edges of the problem we’re solving.
20:18 Huge thanks to Dr.
20:19 Dan Cox and his team of researchers for inviting us to see this happen.
20:27 I love talking about the engineering of the built
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