South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Florida’s building code doesn’t take sea rise into account, but that could change

- By Alex Harris Miami Herald

The last time the Florida building code changed, it required any new constructi­on along the coast to elevate buildings a whole foot. Now, a new study suggests that may not be enough and calls for yet another foot.

The rising base elevations of homes are a clear sign that — despite waffling political rhetoric from the federal and state level — the people who plan and build in coastal Florida consider the threat of sea rise very real.

“If we’re going to build a resilient Florida, the hurricanes aren’t going away. Climate change isn’t going to stop,” said Craig Fugate, Florida’s former director of emergency management and FEMA head under Barack Obama. “We cannot keep building the way we always have and expect a different outcome in future disasters.”

Florida’s long and winding coastline is packed with people, with more arriving by the day.

That makes the state more vulnerable to sea level rise and increasing­ly powerful hurricanes than any other.

But as of 2019, Florida’s massive, nationally renowned statewide building code still doesn’t have much to say about how to build with climate change in mind. That could change this year, as a new Florida Internatio­nal University study commission­ed by the Florida Building Commission makes its way through the building code bureaucrac­y. It’s too late to add anything to the 2020 code update, but a subcommitt­ee accepted the findings unanimousl­y this summer.

One of its first recommenda­tions: bring all new constructi­on along the flood-prone coast up another foot.

“The building code doesn’t currently take sea level rise into account,” said Tiffany Troxler, associate director of science for the FIU Sea Rise Solutions Center and co-author of the report. “One recommenda­tion was simply to try to account for that uncertaint­y that we cannot currently account

Reinaldo Borges,

architect and member of Miami’s Resilience Board

for, including sea level rise, to add one foot to the elevations that are already recommende­d.”

Another idea involves following in South Florida’s footsteps and developing a region-specific sea level rise curve that’s updated every five years to guide building.

A third recommenda­tion calls for the state to review groundwate­r maps before allowing septic tanks to be installed. Rising groundwate­r from sea rise has already caused dangerous (and gross) septic failures across Miami-Dade County, a problem that could cost $3 billion to solve in MiamiDade alone.

Elevating buildings, however, was the report’s most dramatic suggestion, and potentiall­y the most impactful.

Every extra foot a building is built over the base flood elevation, the minimum height for new constructi­on to qualify for flood insurance, is a discount on flood insurance. That additional height over the FEMA minimum is called freeboard. Elevating a single foot could drop annual flood insurance premiums 17 percent. A second foot could shave 37 percent off a premium.

Roderick Scott, board member of the Flood Mitigation Industry Associatio­n, said agencies that grade a city’s credit (and determine how much it will pay for bonds) have increasing­ly started factoring in how a city is adapting to sea level rise.

“If you don’t have a foot of freeboard you’re going to have higher bonding costs,” he said.

Florida wouldn’t be the first flood-prone place to require extra height on new buildings. New Jersey and New York instituted two feet of freeboard after Superstorm Sandy. Annapolis, Maryland, requires two feet. Nashville calls for four feet.

Even Miami and Miami Beach have a minimum freeboard of one foot, with the option to go up to five feet.

In Fugate’s time with the Obama administra­tion, the president even signed an executive order mandating all federal buildings be built two feet above FEMA’s base flood elevation. It was reversed under President Donald Trump.

Two feet in Florida makes sense, he said.

“It’s a good first step, but in New Orleans they go three feet above. And the other challenge is this only happens for homes that occur in the flood zones,” he said. “We’re seeing a lot of flooding outside of the special risk areas. If we’re only doing it in the high-risk areas what does it do for the people outside of that? It does not appear FEMA is updating their flood maps soon enough or fast enough.”

A Florida example of this, he noted, is Hurricane Michael in the Panhandle. More than 80 percent of homes flooded by the storm weren’t in FEMA flood zones, so they weren’t required to have insurance or elevate their homes very far off the ground.

Reinaldo Borges, an architect and member of Miami’s Resilience Board, called freeboard one of the most effective strategies to protect a property from sea rise, but said he has a hard time convincing clients to elevate a home or building if they’re not required to.

“When you give a developer a minimum, typically they go with the minimum.

Rarely do they go above it,” he said. “Unless you codify things, things don’t just happen.”

The biggest barrier to adding more freeboard is cost. Homes built directly on the ground, known as slab on grade, are some of the cheapest to build. Homebuilde­rs across the country have fought local government­s trying to add more freeboard, saying it will drive up prices and exacerbate affordable housing issues. The report passed an initial panel review, but the deadline has passed for the full building commission to consider adding its recommenda­tions to the 2020 codes. The next code change is in 2023.

“For an additional one foot, that’s a considerab­le increase,” said Truly Burton, government affairs director for the Builders Associatio­n of South Florida. “We just did it 18 months ago.”

Elevating a 2,000-square-foot home can range from just under $900 per foot for concrete block piers to almost $5,000 per foot using only dirt, according to a 2006 study from the American Institutes for Research updated with 2017 constructi­on costs. Proponents argue the discounted insurance premium pays off the investment over time.

Burton said her organizati­on has supported previous requiremen­ts to keep homes hurricane safe, and they see sea rise as a serious issue. But in the balance between affordabil­ity and resiliency, Burton said, they try to stay “right in the center.”

“You gotta stay safe. We build houses that are affordable, please God. And they have to be safe,” she said.

Fugate said higher freeboard upsets the profit margins for homebuilde­rs, who are in the business of transactio­ns, not long-term risk. And if those buildings aren’t strong enough to withstand a hurricane or a flood, rebuilding takes longer and costs more.

“The question is which is more expensive? Building resilient homes or rebuilding them all post-disaster?” Fugate said. “I think Florida’s got some rude awakenings that there are no good, cheap, easy answers to adapting to climate change.”

A file photo shows a baby loggerhead turtle in Delray Beach. The city beat its previous record for most sea turtle nests in a single season, with 361, including 290 loggerhead turtles, 56 green turtles and 15 leatherbac­k turtles producing over 20,000 new baby turtles this year.

“When you give a developer a minimum (freeboard height), typically they go with the minimum. Rarely do they go above it. Unless you codify things, things don’t just happen.”

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