Building A Safe Room Inside Your House
Did you know . . .
Almost every state in the United States is subject to hurricanes, tornadoes, or
both. These extreme windstorms can cause extensive damage to buildings, and they
threaten the lives of building occupants.
FEMA, in cooperation with the Wind Engineering Research Center of Texas Tech University,
has developed designs for wind shelters that homeowners can build inside their houses.
These shelters are designed to provide protection from the forces of extreme winds
as high as 250 mph, including the impact of wind borne debris.
Extreme windstorms such as tornadoes and hurricanes pose a serious threat to buildings
and their occupants in many areas of the United States. Tornadoes strong enough
to damage roofs, destroy mobile homes, snap or up root large trees, and turn debris
into damaging wind borne missiles have occurred in virtually every state. Hurricanes
have affected all Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coastal areas in the United States,
including Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Hawaii has also been affected
by hurricanes. Even states not normally considered susceptible to extreme windstorms
include areas threatened by dangerous high winds. These areas, typically near mountain
ranges, include the Pacific Northwest coast.
Your house was probably built in accordance with local building codes that consider
the effects of minimum design winds. These are winds that, according to building
code requirements, your house must be able to withstand. However, a tornado or hurricane
can often cause winds much greater than those on which local building code requirement
are based. Your house may be built "to code," but that does not mean that it can
withstand winds from extreme events. If you are concerned about wind hazards where
you live, especially if you live in Wind Zone III or IV, you should consider building
a shelter.
The purpose of a wind shelter is to provide a space where you and your family can
survive a tornado or hurricane with little or no injury. You can build a shelter
in one of several places in your house, in your basement, beneath a concrete slab-on-grade
foundation or garage floor, or in an interior room on the first floor. Shelters
built below ground level provide the greatest protection, but a shelter built in
a first-floor interior room can also provide the necessary protection. Emergency
response personnel and people cleaning up after tornadoes have often found an interior
room of a severely damaged house still standing when little of the house remains
above ground.
To protect its occupants, an in-house shelter must be able to withstand the forces
exerted by high winds and remain standing, even if the rest of the house is severely
damaged. Therefore:
- The shelter must be adequately anchored to resist overturning and uplift.
- The walls, ceiling, and door of the shelter must withstand wind pressure
and resist penetration by wind borne missiles and falling debris.
- The connections between all parts of the shelter must be strong enough
to resist the wind forces without failing.
- If sections of either interior or exterior house walls are used as
walls of the shelter, they must be separated from the structure of the house, so
that damage to the house will not cause damage to the shelter.
The shelter booklet, Taking Shelter From the Storm: Building a Safe Room Inside
Your House prepared by FEMA provides the information that you or your
contractor will need to build a shelter that meets these requirements. The booklet
includes:
- Homeowners risk assessment worksheet; helps determine risk from extreme
winds and assists in consideration of a shelter.
- Guidance construction plans for builders and contractors; provides
all the information to build a shelter.
- Cost estimates.
Want To Learn More?
Order Taking Shelter From the Storm: Building a Safe Room Inside You House,
FEMA brochure L-233, from FEMA Publications, 1-888-565-3896, or visit their web
site at http://www.fema.gov/.
-or-
Taking Shelter From the Storm: Building a Safe Room Inside Your House, FEMA publication 320 (booklet and constructions plans).
We request that attribution to this information be given as follows: From
"Taking Shelter From the Storm: Building a Safe Room Inside Your House", developed
by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
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