The spatial adventure of home foreclosure continues: empty homes in the U.S. hurricane belt run the risk of becoming "wind-propelled debris" should they be hit by a future storm.
As the Associated Press reports, "communities at the epicenter of the nation's housing crisis are coming to realize that this year's hurricane season, which began this month, represents yet another pitfall." In other words, "hurricanes could make hazards of thousands of foreclosed-upon houses" – turning those homes into airborne projectiles.
Building-storms.
After all, the AP asks, "who will secure all the foreclosed homes if a storm does approach?"
It must be an eery feeling, I'd suspect, when you realize that all those empty houses sitting around you might someday be weaponized: latent storms of wood and vinyl siding just waiting for the moment when they can pick up and whirl through the streets, like something out of Transformers 3.
So do you tear the houses down in advance of a storm that might never arrive? Or do you surround your own house with vast nets and deflection shields for protection against the inevitable debris?
Ironically, though, as Steve Silberman – who first sent me this link – points out, there is simultaneous interest in using these very foreclosed homes as hurricane shelters. As the Florida Courier points out, this idea, if implemented, would also "address a source of concern among emergency specialists in Florida: the growing number of vacant homes that could be splintered into construction debris by a hurricane if no one secures them with shutters and plywood."
Monday, June 15, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment