Resource Record Details
Taking Shelter From the Storm
Every year, tornadoes, hurricanes and other extreme windstorms injure and kill people, and cause millions of dollars worth of property damage. Building a safe room, or shelter, inside your home or small business can help provide “near-absolute protection” for you, your family, or employees from injury or death caused by the dangerous forces of extreme winds. A safe room designed and constructed to prescriptive designs found in FEMA publication 320, Taking Shelter From the Storm: Building a Safe Room Inside Your Home or Small Business, Edition 3, July 2008, will meet or exceed the International Code Council (ICC) residential and small community shelter design criteria.
Document Details:
Resource Type: |
Poster |
Audience Categories: |
Businesses / Professionals
Educational Institutes and Professionals
Lenders and Brokers
State, Local and Tribal Representatives
Insurance Industry
Hazard Mitigation Officers
Federal Agencies
News Media
Design and Construction Industry
Emergency Personnel and Managers
Mapping Professionals
FEMA Regions
Planners
Contractors and Vendors
|
Hazard Types: |
Tornado
Hurricane/Tropical Storm
|
Subjects: |
Mitigation Strategies and Techniques
Mitigation Planning
Emergency Preparedness
Public Outreach and Education
Emergency Planning
Infrastructure Design
Emergency Response
Building Design
Risk Assessment
|
Series: |
ESRI Poster Display
-
HAZUS-MH Building Counts Affected: 100-Year Flood Exceedance and Potential Elevation Requirement, New Orleans, Louisiana
Harrison County, Mississippi: Advisory Base Flood Elevation to Existing Ground Elevation Differential
Pass Christian, Mississippi: Relating Observed Flood Damage to the Flood Insurance Rate Map
Residential Substantially Damaged Buildings in Relation to the Katrina Surge Inundation and Advisory Base Flood Elevations
Flood Map Modernization
After Hurricane Katrina: FEMA Flood Recovery Mapping
Katrina - Rebuilding Efforts: Why FEMA Created Katrina and Rita Flood Recovery Maps
Katrina - Rebuiding Efforts: Orleans Parish Advisory Base Flood Elevation Maps
Hurricane Katrina: Ratio of Modeled Peak Gust Wind Speeds to Design Peak Gust Wind Speeds
HAZUS Evaluation of 1906 Magnitude Earthquake in Today's Environment - Displaced Households
HAZUS Evaluation of 1906 Magnitude Earthquake in Today's Environment- Economic Loss
Potential Loss of Functionality: Hospitals, Hurricane Katrina
Design Level Exceedance- Peak Gust Wind Speeds, Hurricane Katrina
Hurricane Katrina Estimated Water Depth for HAZUS-MH Loss Estimation, New Orleans, Louisiana
HAZUS-MH Estimated Peak Gust Wind Speeds: Hurricane Katrina
Hurricane Katrina: GIS Spatial Analysis of Flood Impacts in Mississippi- Damaged Primary Residences Outside the High Risk Flood
Residential Substantially Damaged Buildings in Relation to the Advisory Base Flood Elevation and Q3
Post Hurricane Katrina ABFE and Q3 Comparison
Mapping for Decision Makers
Mapping for Decision Makers
Mapping the 100-Year Floodplain is Not the End of the Story
Using HAZUS-MH for Mitigation Planning Efforts
Using HAZUS-MH to Promote Seismic Safety
Flood Map Modernization - Then and Now: Flood Mapping from Paper to Digital
FEMA Digital Flood Hazard Data Products
Mapping Project Tracking Systems
Cooperating Technical Partners: The Flood Control District of Maricopa County, Arizona
How Many People Live in Coastal Counties?
Number of Severe Repetitive Loss Properties per County
Harris County, Texas Severe Repetitive Loss Structures
Using HAZUS-MH and GIS to Measure Mitigation Successes - Red River Flood
Point Symbology for Emergency Management
|
Download Plug-in
Some of the links on this page require a plug-in to view them. Links to the plug-ins are available below.
Adobe Acrobat (PDF)