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Last modified
3/5/2021 12:21:12 PM
Creation date
10/14/2020 10:28:22 AM
Metadata
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Template:
Official Documents
Official Document Type
Plan
Approved Date
10/06/2020
Control Number
2020-209
Agenda Item Number
8.D.
Entity Name
Emergency Management Division
Subject
2020 Indian River County Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan (CEMP)
approved by the Florida Division of Emergency Management (see Resolution 2020-084)
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structure; and <br />• They generate large quantities of flying debris as the <br />built environment is progressively damaged; thus, <br />amplifying their destructive power. <br />In hurricanes, gusts of wind can be expected to exceed the <br />sustained wind velocity by 25% to 50%. This means a <br />hurricane with sustained winds of 150 mph will have wind <br />gusts exceeding 200 mph. The wind's pressure against a fixed <br />structure increases with the square of the velocity. For <br />example a 100 -mph wind will exert a pressure of approximately <br />40 pounds per square foot on a flat surface, while a 190 -mph <br />wind will exert a force of 122 pounds per square foot on that <br />same structure. In terms of a 4- by 8 -foot sheet of plywood <br />nailed over a window, there would be 1,280 pounds of <br />pressure against this sheet in a 100 -mph wind, and 3,904 <br />pounds or 1.95 tons of pressure against this sheet in a 190 - <br />mph wind. <br />The external and internal pressures generated against a <br />structure vary greatly with increases in elevation, shapes of <br />buildings, openings in the structures, and the surrounding <br />buildings and terrain. Buildings at ground level experience <br />some reductions in wind forces simply because of the drag <br />exerted by the ground against the lowest levels of the air <br />column. High-rise buildings, particularly those located along <br />the beachfront will receive the full strength of hurricane winds <br />on their upper stories. Recent studies estimate that wind <br />speed increases by approximately 37% just 15 feet above <br />ground level. <br />The wind stream generates uplift as it divides and flows around <br />a structure. The stream following the longest path around a <br />building, generally the path over the roof, speeds up to rejoin <br />the wind streams following shorter paths, generally around the <br />walls. This is the same phenomenon that generates uplift on <br />an aircraft's wing. The roof in effect becomes an airfoil that is <br />attempting to "take off' from the rest of the building. Roof <br />vortexes generally concentrate the wind's uplift force at the <br />corners of a roof. These key points can experience uplift <br />forces two to five times greater than those exerted on other <br />parts of the roof. <br />Once the envelope of the building has been breached through <br />the loss of a window or door, or because of roof damage, wind <br />Indian River County Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan Basic Page 16 <br />
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