How many MPH winds can a Villages house withstand?

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Old 09-06-2017, 01:00 PM
jnieman jnieman is offline
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Default How many MPH winds can a Villages house withstand?

Sorry if this was posted before but I can't find it. Just curious about what MPH winds our houses were built to withstand? We have a vinyl sided stick built designer. I tried calling The Villages Insurance and they were outright rude telling me they had to answer the other 2,000 calls that had come in before mine and would not even listen to my question.
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Old 09-06-2017, 01:20 PM
bluedivergirl bluedivergirl is offline
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It is going to depend on when your home was built. Building Codes were significantly toughened in 2000.

... A key focus of the modern building code is the exterior of the building, also known as the building envelope. New homes built in Florida within an area where 120 mph winds or greater are expected must have exterior impact protection. Examples of impact protection include impact-resistant windows, hurricane shutters and reinforced doors. Other code changes for 120 mph wind zones include mandatory roof straps that connect the roof of a home through cables all the way to a basement or concrete slab. The building code community is now looking more closely at energy codes and how they interact with building codes to ensure that homes built in the future can provide energy efficiency and impact protection at the same time. ...

http://www.hurricanescience.org/soci...demergingtech/

Much more info at the link.

A quick way to tell is to examine your garage door. If it has heavy reinforcement bars, your home is likely post-2000.


I'm not an architect, but I worked for one for 20 years.
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Old 09-06-2017, 01:42 PM
rustyp rustyp is offline
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What does a published MPH withstand number really mean ? Perhaps it means the structure should protect you from flying debris or collapse up to some number. From a damage standpoint my guess is shingles will blow off at wind speed much less than say 120mph. Now the torrential rains start and you will have major water damage - still a mess. Then the mold and mildew starts. A potential major health hazard. Try and get a drying company when hundreds of thousands have major damage.Be careful of being lulled into a false sense of security with these numbers.
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Old 09-06-2017, 01:47 PM
jnieman jnieman is offline
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Originally Posted by bluedivergirl View Post
It is going to depend on when your home was built. Building Codes were significantly toughened in 2000.

... A key focus of the modern building code is the exterior of the building, also known as the building envelope. New homes built in Florida within an area where 120 mph winds or greater are expected must have exterior impact protection. Examples of impact protection include impact-resistant windows, hurricane shutters and reinforced doors. Other code changes for 120 mph wind zones include mandatory roof straps that connect the roof of a home through cables all the way to a basement or concrete slab. The building code community is now looking more closely at energy codes and how they interact with building codes to ensure that homes built in the future can provide energy efficiency and impact protection at the same time. ...

Hurricanes: Science and Society: Current and Emerging Technologies of Hurricane Protection

Much more info at the link.

A quick way to tell is to examine your garage door. If it has heavy reinforcement bars, your home is likely post-2000.


I'm not an architect, but I worked for one for 20 years.
Our house was builit in 2008 and we do have the hurricane straps. Thanks for the info. Just looked at the garage door and there are bars going across every foot or so.
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Old 09-06-2017, 02:53 PM
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Henryk Henryk is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bluedivergirl View Post
...

Hurricanes: Science and Society: Current and Emerging Technologies of Hurricane Protection

Much more info at the link.

A quick way to tell is to examine your garage door. If it has heavy reinforcement bars, your home is likely post-2000.


I'm not an architect, but I worked for one for 20 years.
Thank you for the link. I almost feel better.
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Old 09-06-2017, 02:54 PM
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Carl in Tampa Carl in Tampa is offline
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Default What Category?

It used to be a part of The Villages sales pitch to mention that the houses were built to survive a certain Category of hurricane. I thought it was Cat 2 or Cat 3, but I don't recall.

Anybody know?
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Old 09-06-2017, 06:59 PM
RalphM RalphM is offline
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New to TV. How can I tell if my house has hurricane straps?
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Old 09-06-2017, 07:41 PM
autumnspring autumnspring is offline
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Default I do wonder about these thoughts

I do recall BEFORE we bought that the codes had been brought up.

In any case, it is like locking the barn AFTER the horse has gotten out.

Many of the homes have been modified since they were built.
Some people have added pools, solar collectors, lawn decoration, heck your plants.

DO WHATEVER YOU CAN TO PREVENT YOUR STUFF FROM BECOMING FLYING DEBRIS. LOOK OVER YOUR PLANTS. PERHAPS, IF YOU THINK THEM A BIT THE WIND WILL NOT BE ABLE TO KNOCK THEM OVER.

DO WHAT YOU CAN.
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Old 09-06-2017, 07:44 PM
autumnspring autumnspring is offline
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Default At this point it does not matter

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New to TV. How can I tell if my house has hurricane straps?
If, you have the date your house was built you can look up the code that was in effect at that time.
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Old 09-06-2017, 08:40 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rustyp View Post
What does a published MPH withstand number really mean ? Perhaps it means the structure should protect you from flying debris or collapse up to some number. From a damage standpoint my guess is shingles will blow off at wind speed much less than say 120mph. Now the torrential rains start and you will have major water damage - still a mess. Then the mold and mildew starts. A potential major health hazard. Try and get a drying company when hundreds of thousands have major damage.Be careful of being lulled into a false sense of security with these numbers.


Well that's a positive outlook. Why don't you go to Hurricane Season Preparedness | State of Florida and learn how to prepare for storms like Irma. It's never too late.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro
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Old 09-07-2017, 05:31 AM
rustyp rustyp is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dbussone View Post
Well that's a positive outlook. Why don't you go to Hurricane Season Preparedness | State of Florida and learn how to prepare for storms like Irma. It's never too late.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro
What I'm positive about is if your home is rated for "X" category hurricane does not mean you should stay. The aftermath which is not incorporated into the rating is no electricity and no air conditioning (as an example) for who knows how long. Thus I find this number as useful as most financial advisers, sounds good but of not much value add. Why do you want to stay - to protect stuff ?

Last edited by rustyp; 09-07-2017 at 06:39 AM. Reason: misspell
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Old 09-07-2017, 06:32 AM
bwtbrisbane bwtbrisbane is offline
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I was told that houses built after 2002 were built to withstand sustained winds of 116 MPH and gusts to 138 MPH. Having said that, after watching the way they throw up houses around here and they lack of real building inspections, who knows.
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Old 09-07-2017, 07:39 AM
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I was told that houses built after 2002 were built to withstand sustained winds of 116 MPH and gusts to 138 MPH. Having said that, after watching the way they throw up houses around here and they lack of real building inspections, who knows.
So your house didn't have building inspections? We have the sign off on each inspection for ours, your house must have slipped thru the cracks, so to speak
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Old 09-07-2017, 07:53 AM
tuccillo tuccillo is offline
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Why is it that you believe the houses lack real building inspections?

Quote:
Originally Posted by bwtbrisbane View Post
I was told that houses built after 2002 were built to withstand sustained winds of 116 MPH and gusts to 138 MPH. Having said that, after watching the way they throw up houses around here and they lack of real building inspections, who knows.
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Old 09-07-2017, 08:52 AM
Ragman Ragman is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RalphM View Post
New to TV. How can I tell if my house has hurricane straps?
Look in the attic. You can see the straps on the joists.
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