SECTION SIX: MITIGATING DAMAGES
IN HAWAII'S HURRICANES, A PERSPECTIVE IN RETROFIT OPTIONS
INTRODUCTION
Each
time a significant wind event is experienced, a well practiced
and oft repeated evaluation procedure begins anew. Each storm
brings forth a new sequence of inspection, survey and assessment
of damage, a flurry of reports, and, finally, recommendations
in preparation for future events. Architects, engineers, representatives
of the insurance agency, code enforcement officials, civil defense
administrators, politicians, et al, descend on the site of disaster,
each group with its unique set of interests and point of view,
ready to dissect and examine the remains, the lessons of the
post-mortem to be used to mitigate the effects of the next occurrence.
Since
this post-disaster survey and evaluation procedure has been
part of the response to all significant hurricanes over the
past few decades, the types of damage and mechanisms which cause
it have been well documented. This sequence of cause and effect,
along with recommendations for future corrective action, forms
a common thread running through past post-hurricane reports.
Thanks to the efforts of these investigative teams, the causes
of building damage in hurricanes, as well as the appropriate
measures to prevent it, are well understood by design, code
and insurance professionals. However well understood, they are
but rarely implemented.
It is
the task of this paper to establish an overview relating the
types of damage caused by hurricane winds, the generic causative
mechanisms of that damage, and achievable, economical measures
that can be taken to effect mitigation in future storms. Further,
qualitative cost conclusions will be drawn which will help to
clarify cost vs benefits of mitigation efforts. The emphasis
is placed on that which is most readily accomplished and is
most cost-effective. In accomplishing these goals heavy reliance
will be placed on reports evaluating damage from hurricanes
Andrew and Iniki and on the research of independent investigators.
WIND
FORCES
First,
it is necessary to understand how wind acts on buildings and
the relative magnitude of the forces which are generated. The
wind pressure increases with the square of the velocity. If
the wind blows at 80 mph, the Code mandated hurricane wind speed
for Hawaii, the wind pressure on the windward face will be 16
lbs/sq ft. If the wind speed is doubled to 160 mph the wind
pressure will be quadrupled to 64 lbs per/sq ft. Considering
that floor loads in an office building are designed for 50 lbs/sq
ft, these wind forces are enormous and act on walls and roofs
that normally carry no other loads.
In general,
when the wind blows on a building, the windward wall experiences
a pressure pushing inward (positive pressure) while the sidewalls
and the leeward wall will experience a suction pressure outward
(negative pressure). The roof, depending on its slope, will
experience an uplift (negative pressure). Wind forces are significantly
increased at corners, ridges, and at abrupt changes in plane
as shown in the illustrations below.
Figure
1 shows the airflow over the building and the areas where it
separates from the building. The wind strikes the endwall, creates
a positive (inward) pressure, and the flow is bent upward and
outward around the building, causing the airflow to separate
from the building creating outward (negative) pressures.
In Figure
2, the wind is unable to accommodate to abrupt changes in direction
and so builds large pressures at the corners, ridge, and at
roof overhangs. The roof tends to be uplifted, the windward
wall to be pushed in, the sidewalls and the leeward walls to
be pulled out. Each of these areas requires special concentration
during the design and construction period with prescribed anchors
provided.
In the
illustrations in Figure 3 above, and Figure 4 below, the basic
wind speed is taken at 100 mph. This will produce a wind pressure
of 25 lbs/sq ft on the windward side of the building, and higher
pressures at the overhangs, ridges, corners and gable ends.
These
higher pressures can be two to three times greater than that
due to the basic wind: approximately 50 lbs/sq ft on the overhangs
and 75 lbs/sq ft at the overhanging corners. It is clear that
these areas demand special attention to detail during construction.
If the
envelope of the building is breached, that is, if there is a
failure of doors, windows, siding/sheathing, garage door, or
gable end in residential structures, or of the enclosure system
in commercial buildings, then the wind will cause internal pressures
and effectively double the outward loads on the sidewalls and
leeward wall, and double the uplift on the roof. This source
of major structural failure due to wind is illustrated below
in Figure 5. It allows the intrusion of wind and water which
accounts for the vast majority of insurance claims due to hurricane
damage.
It has
been shown that of damage due to wind in hurricane Hugo, 95%
was to the roof. The average damage suffered by a dwelling was
25% of its insured value. In the average insurance claim, however,
75% of the claim was for water damage resulting from intrusion
of water following loss of roofing or failures of the enclosure.
STRUCTURAL
FAILURE
Major
structural failure during a hurricane is the exception rather
than the rule, particularly among engineered buildings:
buildings which because of their size, occupancy or importance
are required to have a structural engineer involved in the design
process. Engineered buildings are more likely to suffer a failure
of the envelope with consequential interior damage due to the
intrusion of wind and water. Major collapse of such structures
is rare.
While
major structural failure among non-engineered, primarily residential
buildings is not the norm, it occurs frequently enough that
it demands and receives special consideration in the 1991 Uniform
Building Code's prescriptive requirements for wood frame and
masonry construction, Appendices Sec 2518 and 2425 respectively.
Sections
2518 and 2425 provide for reinforcing the structure to provide
a continuous path of load resistance from the point of application
of wind loads to the foundation. This is accomplished by providing
metal ties connecting the structural elements together assuring
continuity at the ridge, between the roof and walls, between
second floor and first floor walls, and first floor walls to
the foundation.
Codes,
Inspection and Enforcement
In looking
to the Building Code for mitigation of damages due to high winds,
it is important to remember a few obvious points:
1.
The appropriate Building Code edition must have been adopted
by the local authority, whether it be the state, county,
or municipality. No adoption, no code, no mitigation benefit.
2.
The Building Code will have an impact only on future buildings;
it does not address the existing stock of buildings except
in certain circumstances of addition, renovation, or repair.
3.
The Building Code will only be as effective as its enforcement.
An inspector's competence in enforcing the Code is no better
than his preparation and training.
4.
Subcontractors installing anchors and ties crucial to the
wind resisting continuous load path and carpenters nailing
the roof and wall sheathing will only do it correctly if
they have been shown the correct way.
Research
has shown that residential buildings built without benefit of
the continuous load path approach of the 1991 UBC have experienced
a significant proportion of structural failures. Even those
buildings built to withstand design wind speeds suffer some
severe structural failures. Failures in this latter group are
frequently due to inadequate knowledge and training inspectors
which results in inadequate inspection and enforcement.
Construction
Quality
Another
frequent cause of failures in buildings subject to code wind
requirements is insufficient knowledge and training of subcontractors
and their employees. Subcontractors installing anchors and ties
crucial to the wind resisting continuous load path and carpenters
nailing the roof and wall sheathing and installing the doors
and windows will only do it correctly if they have been shown
how.
Cost
of Damage
There
are two primary sources of loss in any hurricane, the cost of
the physical damage to structure and infrastructure, and the
economic loss due to decreased economic activity, the loss of
jobs, and the multiplier effect as the loss filters down through
the economy taking more jobs along the way. While the two sources
of loss are approximately equal to one another, the first is
well known and understood, but the second, which can be greater,
is all too seldom discussed. Nowhere is this more evident than
in the case of hurricane Iniki on Kauai.
Iniki
cost the state almost $1.6 billion. But that appalling total
does not include disruptions in economic activity; those losses
amount to almost $900 million, putting the total loss to the
state's economy at almost $2.5 billion.
Failures
in Commercial Construction
While
major structural failures are rare in commercial construction,
they are not unknown, particularly in the coastal zone where
buildings are subject to flooding, surge and wave action, and
the scouring of footings and foundations.
A significant
exception to this is in pre-engineered metal buildings which
have not fared so well in recent hurricanes. These buildings
suffer a loss of the lightweight sheet metal envelope, failure
of primary structural members, and failure at the connection
to the foundation. Studies of pre-engineered metal buildings
are ongoing by the NMBA, engineering groups and code officials
and are a special class of buildings beyond the scope and intent
of this paper.
Other
than as noted above, failures in engineered commercial structures
are largely limited to loss of roof ballast (gravel), loss of
roofing, loss of components from roof mounted equipment, and
breakage of glass in the envelope. It is this last, glass breakage,
that causes the preponderance of economic loss in strong winds.
Glass,
while exceedingly strong and able to withstand the effects of
design wind speeds, cannot withstand the impacts of windborne
debris. In a hurricane the air is laden with flying objects:
roof gravel, roofing, siding, roof sheathing, tree limbs, etc.
These missiles have a velocity approximating that of the wind.
They can break exterior glass and lead to a sequence of events
causing catastrophic loss to the building interior and contents.
Damages
in Commercial Construction
Other
than damages due to flood, surge and wave action in the flood
zone, the bulk of damage to commercial structures is due to
failures in the building envelope, primarily the glass as noted
above. With the failure of the glass, there is consequent pressurization
of the interior due to the intrusion of wind which doubles the
negative pressures on walls and roof; secondary failures occur
in the envelope due to the internal pressure as other windows
blow out, and the destruction of the interior and its contents
is completed by a combination of wind and water blowing through
the open building. An opening of only 5% of a wall's area is
sufficient to fully pressurize the interior of a building.
If the
loss of a hotel room's interior and furnishings has a value
of $75,000, the loss of use of that room could amount to an
additional $75,000 loss to the economy over the period of recovery
and reconstruction.
Failure
and Damage in Light Construction
Since
there is no requirement for engineering in most light and residential
construction, and there having been no specific requirement
for wind resistance in these structures prior to the current
code edition's prescriptive requirements, there is considerably
more variety to failure modes in light, non-engineered construction
than in larger commercial buildings.
Structural
failures in light construction, whether bearing masonry or light
framing, can be broadly categorized as those events arising
from the lack of a continuous path of load resistance from the
roof to the foundation, and events arising from the breaching
of the envelope, pressurization of the building and consequential
blowing out of the leeward walls, sidewalls, windows or roof.
Ultimately
all loads on a structure, wherever placed, will be transmitted
to and must be resisted by the foundation. If there is a weak
link in the path from point of loading to the foundation, that
is where the failure will occur. If the roof is not adequately
anchored to the walls, an excessive uplifting load on the roof
will not be transferred through the walls to the foundation;
the roof will be removed and become another missile in the maelstrom.
Without the roof to tie the walls together the walls collapse
and the loss will be total.
Similarly,
if the building is not anchored to the foundation, as in the
case of "tofu block" foundations so common in Hawaii,
then it will move off the foundation in high winds sustaining
major damage. The key to a structure's resistance to wind forces
is establishing a continuous path of load resistance wherein
the various elements of the building are tied together with
metal ties, and the building is solidly anchored to an adequate
foundation system.
Having
tied the building together into a single load resisting system,
the effort expended to mitigate the second category of failure
sources -- breaching the building's enclosure system -- will
have enhanced effectiveness. Common failures of the envelope
are glass breakage or the blowing out of doors and window units
due to inadequate fastening to the building itself, failure
of garage doors due to inadequate resistance to bending, loss
of roofing, and failure at the joint of endwall and endwall
gable. In each of the cases the result is the same, substantial
loss of the interior and contents due to water damage, pressurization
with secondary failures in the roof , sidewalls and leeward
walls.
Whichever
way the initial failure is initiated, the end result, if not
a major structural loss, is going to be loss of the interior
finishes and contents, the primary source of loss in hurricanes.
The simplest and most cost effective mitigation efforts are
those aimed at minimizing the damage due to water penetration
into the building.
In considering
the costs and benefits of undertaking a program of building
retrofitting to mitigate future storm damage, it is important
to keep in mind the overall statistical probability of a building
being subjected to design wind speeds during its lifetime. The
building code bases the design wind speed of an area on a 50
year recurrence period. If the building has a useful life of
50 years, its probability of experiencing winds exceeding the
design wind speed of 90 mph (peak gust) for Hawaii, is 64%,
in 100 years the probability rises to 87%. The odds, then, favor
a building experiencing winds exceeding code values over the
its lifetime. The prudent gambler would hedge his bets by improving
his odds through mitigation.
RETROFIT
OPTIONS AND COSTS FOR LIGHT CONSTRUCTION
Continuous
Load Path
If damage
is to be mitigated in a building built to older Building Code
editions, the first imperative is to tie the building together
with, particular emphasis on preventing loss of the roof. Inadequate
connections of the roofing and roof sheathing are one of the
major causes of damage to residential buildings. Structural
materials rarely fail; God resides in the connections.
Tie
together the various structural elements of the building using
the appropriate metal anchors to connect the first floor to
the foundation, the second floor to the first floor walls, the
roof to the uppermost walls and the two sides of the roof to
one another. This work should be done following, as close as
is practicable, the prescriptive requirements of the UBC-91
Appendix Chapters 24 and 25.
The
cost of accomplishing this work will vary according to the type
of construction and complexity of the building design.
Estimated Cost Unit Cost $3/sf - $5/sf Cost $4800
Roof
The
following retrofit options for the roof can most economically
be accomplished at the time of re-roofing an existing building.
Remove
all of the existing roofing down to the bare roof-deck. Do not
cover the existing roofing with the new roofing. The roof deck
nailing can now be examined and deficiencies corrected on the
body of the roof, the gable-ends, overhangs and ridge.
Since
there are no asphalt shingles that can reliably withstand winds
in excess of 90 mph, a second line of defense can realized by
installing 30 lb. saturated felt underlayment instead of the
usual 15 lb. felt and using simplex nails, roofing nails with
an integral washer to distribute the load over a greater area.
This will provide a secondary back-up waterproof surface beneath
the primary roofing.
The
new roofing can now be applied using connections of suitable
strength, i.e., carefully bedded tiles with appropriate nailing,
properly installed cedar shakes, or heavyweight asphalt shingles
using simplex nails, six to the shingle.
Estimated Cost Unit Cost $1.50/sf Cost $1800
Protect
Openings:
Windows
Glass
rarely fails due to simple wind pressure. If glass is going
to fail in a hurricane, it is far more likely to fail due to
missile impacts, a combination of missile impacts with oscillations
due to gusts and cycling inward and outward pressures, or a
pulling of the entire window unit out of its opening due to
poor attachment.
Shutters
To protect
glass against the impacts of windborne debris, the simplest
and most cost effective mitigation option is the installation
of shutters with proper connections to withstand both positive
and negative pressures. (Shutter failures in hurricane Andrew
were not uncommon, but were almost always due to being pulled
off of the building (poor connections) rather than pushed in.
Nevertheless, shutters are considered so effective that without
them one can no longer obtain insurance in Dade County.)
An alternative
to shutters, particularly in commercial applications, would
be a system of movable louvers doubling as sunshades and capable
of withstanding impacts of 8 to 10 lb objects with a velocity
of 80 mph.
Estimated Cost Unit Cost $150/window Cost $1500
Re-glazing
Where
shutters are not a desirable alternative the glass can be replaced
using a tested system of tempered, laminated glass replacing
the original glass. While this is expensive, it may be the only
alternative for many commercial and office buildings with curtain
walls of fixed glazing.
Estimated Cost Unit Cost - 5% to 10% of Building
Cost
Taping
windows has little or no positive benefit and is a waste of
time. However, a permanent installation of solar film on the
inside of the glass and adequately anchored at its perimeter
is a less expensive option which has been shown to be effective
in protecting the interior in event of glass breakage.
Estimated Cost Unit Cost $150-$250/Window
Attachment
Normal
attachment of doors and windows is to resist inward rather than
outward pressures and installations are often inadequate to
loads generated by hurricane winds. Units being pulled out of
the building is the second most common mode of failure of doors
and windows after missile impacts. Exterior doors and windows
can have improved anchorage to the opening in the building wall
by adding anchors with increased penetration into the framing.
Estimated Cost Unit Cost $$25/Opening Cost $250
Doors
Doors
should be anchored to the building opening as stated above.
An interesting note is that one door in Andrew resulted in $3,000,000
damage, an incentive to undertake simple and inexpensive mitigation
measures.
Estimated Cost Unit Cost $25/Opening Cost $50
Garage
Doors
Garage
doors, because of their light construction and the typically
large openings they must cover, are prone to failure due solely
to wind pressure; they fail in bending due to inadequate thickness
and a resulting low strength in resisting bending. Virtually
no large overhead doors are made that will resist design loads
in a hurricane and they are frequently the primary cause of
major structural failures. Once they fail, the building is pressurized
and a further chain of failure is likely.
The
simplest retrofit measure is to strengthen the existing door
by attaching vertical struts behind and attached to the door
which run from the ceiling structure above into the slab below,
steel bars or angles of appropriate size could prevent the failure
of the door.
An alternative
buttressing against inward forces can be accomplished by simply
backing the family car against the door to hold it. However,
since a characteristic of hurricane winds is changing direction
as the storm passes, this latter strategy might fail when the
wind reverses its direction and the pressures change from positive
to negative.
Estimated
Cost Unit Cost $200 Cost $200
Brace
Gable Ends
A frequent
cause of failure in light frame construction is the inadequately
attached and braced gable end walls. The gable end is commonly
built on top of the wall below with no members running the full
height to reinforce against lateral loads. The joint behaves
like a hinge and collapses. This critical joint is simply corrected
by lateral bracing running back into the roof construction.
Estimated Cost Unit Cost $150/Gable Cost $300
Summary
For
an approximate cost of $8,000 to $10,000, or approximately 5%
of the replacement cost, the average single family residence
in Hawaii can be brought to a condition which will give reasonable
assurance that it will survive an Iniki type hurricane with
only superficial damage and no significant insurance claim.
Mitigation
priorities for light construction should be to:
1.
Keep the roof on by improving anchorage and establishing
a continuous load path.
2. Protect
the openings: doors, garage doors and windows.
3. Tie
in the gable ends.
RETROFIT
OF HOTELS AND COMMERCIAL STRUCTURES
Protection
of the Envelope
The
most important single mitigation measure that can be taken by
the hotel industry as well as other high rise buildings is to
protect the glass either by means of shutters, protective movable-louver
solar-screens, or other covering device, or by replacement of
the glass with tempered, laminated glass units which have been
successfully tested for the application. Such a system was developed,
tested and reported by Minor and Behr and consisted of inner
and outer layers of 7/16 tempered glass with an interlayer of
.060 PVB and PET plastic films. In this design the outer layer
is sacrificed to the airborne missiles, the interlayer holds
it all in place, and the inner layer remains sufficiently strong
to resist the wind pressures.
In hurricane
Andrew there were five distinct modes of failure in the glass.
The causes were: windblown debris, wind-induced pressure, large
deflections leading to pull-out of the glass from the stops,
failure of vertical mullions and failure of the connections
anchoring the frame to the building. Of these, the most common
was breakage due to windborne debris and due to outward acting
pressure. The missile impact broke the glass, the building became
pressurized and the other glazing on that floor was blown out.
It was
noted by investigators following Andrew that "with few
exceptions, glazing systems performed poorly and damage to building
contents was extensive. Most building occupants were forced
to move out and conduct business elsewhere for time periods
likely to exceed a year." These losses are both foreseeable
and avoidable.
The
airborne debris most prevalent at the lower levels of a building,
up to 30 feet, included 2x4's, panels of sheet metal pieces
of masonry. The mid level, from 30 feet to a level near the
top of adjacent buildings was primarily roof gravel from those
buildings, and at the upper level there is little or no flying
debris. By eliminating gravel as a ballast and ultra violet
protection, or by containing it on the roof, one of the largest
sources of storm damage can be largely eliminated.
Protection
of the Roof
Failures
in roofing due to high winds are common and the consequential
damage to interiors and contents caused by the intrusion of
water is extensive. Two alternatives to reducing this source
of damage are much greater attention to details of installation
of roofing materials and "requiring a secondary roof membrane
which will not be susceptible to removal by wind action. Otherwise,
major water damage can be expected to continue to occur even
when the structural systems and roof sheathing remain intact."
One method would be to provide a waterproof membrane over the
roof-deck but under to insulation. If the roofing were breached,
the insulation would remain protecting the secondary membrane
below.
Elevation
of First Floor Above the Flood Plain
In those
cases where it is feasible, particularly on ocean-front hotel
properties, the first floor spaces, where they are below expected
levels of flood and surge, should be opened for free wash through
and dedicated for outdoor uses. The wisdom of such a strategy
is apparent to even the most casual observer of the damage to
the hotels at Poipu.
Mitigation
priorities for commercial construction should be to:
1.
Protect the glazing with protective devices or by
reglazing using tempered, laminated glass systems.
2.
Eliminate gravel as a ballast and ultra-violet protection
for built-up or membrane roofs.
3. Provide
a second roofing membrane to prevent roofing failures.
4. Eliminate
ground floor occupancies in the flood plain.
OTHER
RECOMMENDATIONS
State
Code
The
state should adopt the latest edition of the UBC in its entirety
as a single uniform statewide building code with administration
and compliance at the county level and central administration,
interpretation and enforcement by the state.
Training
of Code Enforcement Personnel
The
state should establish mandatory training courses for county
code enforcement personnel ensuring familiarity with and enforcement
of code wind provisions.
Training
of Contractors
The
state should establish mandatory short training courses for
state licensed contractors and their supervisory personnel ensuring
familiarity with and correct implementation of code wind provisions.
Quality
Assurance
Private
inspection and certification of the wind resistive construction
by registered design professionals should be a required part
of all residential construction and should be paid for by the
owner, or, in the case of speculative work, by the contractor
or developer.
CONCLUSIONS
Research
and post-hurricane evaluations have demonstrated that most actual
and consequential damages in hurricane winds are due, ultimately,
to water damage where the water penetration was due to failures
in roofing and the envelope. Economic analysis demonstrates
that mitigation efforts in reducing these failures in the existing
building stock can produce savings of from three to five times
the cost of retrofitting.
It is difficult to persuade people to expend precious
and scarce resources to prepare for events which may never happen.
While it is true that an individual building in a particular
location may never experience hurricane damage, it is also true
that, in the aggregate, all buildings in Hawaii share the same
risks and statistical probabilities of damage, and that, in
the long-haul, another Iniki-type hurricane is a virtual certainty.
Mitigation will pay off!!