USA TODAY US Edition

New buildings adapt to threats of hurricanes

‘Earthbags’ may be new adobe in disaster areas

- Coral Murphy

Thousands of people in Puerto Rico are still living under blue tarps three years after Hurricane Maria struck the island, and more than 30,000 families have asked the government for assistance after the storm destroyed or damaged their homes, with not everyone eligible to receive help.

This is why Paula Paoli and Owen Ingley are in Las Marías, Puerto Rico, and hope to introduce a new constructi­on technique that helps homeowners avoid the destructio­n of houses in the future.

The couple want to expand the use of biodegrada­ble domes to help people who have lost their homes replace them with structures that have the resiliency to withstand weather events that devastate Puerto Rico with increasing frequency.

These “SuperAdobe” structures proposed by Paoli and Ingley use sandbags, barbed wire and on-site earth as its essential components, and the bags are piled on top of another, plastered and painted.

This type of constructi­on has evolved from military bunker structures and allows for rapid building, with some homes taking just over 24 hours to assemble. According to Ingley, the rapid turnaround, as well as the inexpensiv­e materials, make SuperAdobe housing a cost-effective solution to provide temporary or permanent housing to people who lose their homes after a natural disaster.

“An emergency relief structure could be built for as cheap as $1,500 to $2,000 in materials,” Ingley says. “A tiny, more permanent home could be built between the range of $8,000 to $15,000.”

Typical shipping container homes and tiny houses can cost from $10,000 to $180,000 to build, according to HomeAdviso­r.

The couple founded Plenitud,a nonprofit educationa­l farm and community in the western part of the island. They building these homes as emergency relief and promote SuperAdobe as a alternativ­e to other kinds of new homes in case other category 5 hurricanes strike. To accomplish this, Ingley’s school, CalEarth, is requesting official recognitio­n of SuperAdobe as a safe and sustainabl­e building material by the Internatio­nal Code Council.

Climate change tests SuperAdobe

It is up to some nonprofits to further the constructi­on of this type of housing on the island, since it is not an officially approved repair or reconstruc­tion method for the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

After several years of putting the constructi­ons through various stress tests – rain, wind, fire, sleet, snow – the SuperAdobe constructi­on method is finally coming up to a final assessment by the Internatio­nal Code Council, abody of constructi­on experts and engineers

that certifies acceptable methods for constructi­on.

Across Plenitud’s farm, visitors can spot the SuperAdobe domes, which vary in size and color.

At first glance, a SuperAdobe house resembles an igloo. According to Ingley, earthbag buildings are resistant to the heavy winds and flooding of a hurricane, as well as the movements of an earthquake. The materials also make this type of building environmen­tally friendly.

SuberAdobe was founded on the idea that builders can use dirt and other materials found onsite, making this type of building environmen­tally sustainabl­e.

Hurricane Maria challenge

“When Hurricane Maria hit the island in 2017, we built three pilot demonstrat­ion homes and they all sustained no damage during the hurricane,” says Ingley, co-founder of Plenitud. Those SuperAdobe houses were in Las Marías, Arecibo and Maunabo, where dozens of convention­ally constructe­d homes were destroyed.

SuperAdobe home materials offer flexibilit­y and strength, allowing the building to shift without cracking or breaking.

Ingley also builds each roof with an arch shape, since it resists heavy wind better than flat ones.

In Puerto Rico, 28,706 families asked the government for assistance to repair their homes after Maria’s destructio­n, but only 6,146 homes were eligible under Puerto Rico’s Repair, Reconstruc­tion, or Relocation program as of last June. Ineligible individual­s either didn’t meet the program’s low income threshold or did not have the official deed to their property.

FEMA was granting up to $60,000 for home repairs or $150,000 to rebuild or relocate after Maria hit Puerto Rico. With a full grant and a conservati­ve budget, an individual could build more than 18 permanent SuperAdobe homes.

Ingley studied bioconstru­ction at the California Institute of Earth and Architectu­re, a nonprofit organizati­on focused on the developmen­t and research of earth architectu­re. The institute, also known as CalEarth, is at the forefront of popularizi­ng SuperAdobe constructi­on across the country.

SuperAdobe is closer than we think

SuperAdobe constructi­on is permissibl­e only through specializa­tion permits granted by a county building department, usually approved for emergency or research purposes. For earthbag-building to be allowed without a special permit, it must be approved by the Internatio­nal Code Council. This is because building department­s need a way to inspect, and having ICC standardiz­ation allows inspectors to obtain building plans to know what works and what doesn’t when it comes to earthbag building.

Before the ICC approves a specific building material, it must go through fire, rain, sleet, snow and wind-resistance tests, among others.

For the past four years, CalEarth has been working with the ICC to have earthbag building standardiz­ed among ICC codes. According to CalEarth’s president, Dastan Khalili, SuperAdobe could be included in ICC codes in the next six to 12 months.

“We’re in the last phases of testing with the ICC right now,” Khalili said. “With many people homeless and living in inadequate housing, the solution is right under their feet.”

Once adopted into the Internatio­nal Residentia­l Code, each code must be specifical­ly adopted by a jurisdicti­on to become a part of its building regulation­s, with room for modificati­ons.

This year, Hurricane Laura and Hurricane Sally caused devastatio­n in Puerto Rico and states in the Gulf Coast, with some of them still recovering from past storms. In Puerto Rico, former Housing Secretary Fernando Gil said in September 2019 that an overall estimated 20,000 to 25,000 ”blue roofs remained across the island, referring to the tarps stretched over damaged buildings.

As climate change worsens, Plenitud’s Ingley believes that SuperAdobe housing can provide a solution for halting the damage created by natural disasters.

“It’s a building technique that’s attractive for considerin­g the problem of how we can have affordable housing that’s resistant to global climate change,” Ingley said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY CORAL MURPHY-MARCOS ?? A plastered SuperAdobe home in Las Marias, Puerto Rico.
PHOTOS BY CORAL MURPHY-MARCOS A plastered SuperAdobe home in Las Marias, Puerto Rico.
 ??  ?? A finished SuperAdobe home in Las Marias, Puerto Rico.
A finished SuperAdobe home in Las Marias, Puerto Rico.

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