General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Why can't they build a hill and then put a shelter below it? [View all]MADem
(135,425 posts)A concrete structure is the way to go. It's got to be built to typhoon standards, though, with straps on the roof and steel reinforcements and so on...there are buildings on Guam and Okinawa that have survived wind gusts close to 200 mph and sustained winds of 80 or more.
We do know how to build these kinds of structures. We should at least make the schools in tornado-prone areas typhoon-proof; that way, they'd survive these tornadoes without too much fuss and people would have a shelter to run to in the event of emergency.
They have some horrible weather in the far east, typhoons and super typhoons. The "good" buildings survive without any issue, and fatalities in places like Japan/Okinawa and Guam, where preparedness is key and ongoing, even with really awful weather, are very, very rare.