Major Hurricane in New York...

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jasons2k
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#221 Postby jasons2k » Tue Oct 11, 2005 10:33 am

2 things to add. Many of the windows broken in Alicia were not supposed to based on their wind ratings alone; it was debris, mostly gravel from nearby rooftops, that ultimately caused them to fail.

Secondly, some windows failed in the Chase tower, Houston's tallest building, during Rita. Downtown Houston only received sustained TS winds from Rita, but at that height that building may have received marginal Cat. 1 conditions. Still, they failed below their rating.
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#222 Postby schmita » Tue Oct 11, 2005 10:34 am

I lived in Lower Manhattan and was there for Sept. 11. My building was one block from the South Tower. Our building was built in 1908 and is 17 stories tall. We felt the building shake from the impact of the planes then again when the towers collapsed. The impact blew out our lobby glass but we lost no windows further up.
I read someplace what the reading was in relation to an earthquake. Maybe someone can find that.

That being said, parts of Lower Manhattan flood during nasty NorthEasters. I was at the World Financial Center one night in 1990 I think it was when the plaza was completely breached by water from the Hudson. That was the same night a US Air plane had to abort at LaGuardia and skidded in to the bay.
irina
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#223 Postby donsutherland1 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 10:36 am

Terstorm1012,

There is some evidence of that. Hence, I mentioned the Cat. 4 under special circumstances (probably at least a 1000-year event, maybe a 10,000-year one, except if a new much warmer Atlantic SST regime eventually become established beyond what occurs during the normal cycles).
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#224 Postby terstorm1012 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 10:36 am

Are there papers on the HURDAT reanalysies that are publically available?

I'd like to read them, since I'm doing research on 'canes in NJ/DE/MD/VA.
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#225 Postby donsutherland1 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 10:39 am

Jschlitz,

Good points. The flying debris issue is something that limits the application of wind ratings, which also might be somewhat overstated under current modeling (at least per the experience with Katrina, Rita, etc.).

Few if any of NYC's buildings are built to the standards of the NHC's headquarters. So, I'd be wary of any claims that the buildings could stand up to Cat. 4 much less a Cat. 5 hurricane (fortunately, a Cat. 5 is probably not possible under the current climate and a Cat. 4 is probably exceptionally rare).
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#226 Postby donsutherland1 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 10:43 am

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#227 Postby terstorm1012 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 11:06 am

Thanks again Don. :)
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#228 Postby f5 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 2:49 pm

NYC's skyscrapers would act like a urban canyon for the winds .the winds would speed up faster making a "mini urban Santa Ana wind effect".for those who live around the LA area of southern california you know what i'm talking about when those winds funnel trough the canyons.
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#229 Postby krysof » Tue Oct 11, 2005 2:58 pm

the winds would tear down some of the buildings, and cause severe damage to the other buildings, also the strong winds would help create an incredible storm surge-large parts of long island would be flooded out, and due to the large population, many people could die

there was an article that NYC is prepared for hurricanes, and they could evacuate about a million people a day, but if a major hurricane was coming up north, it would not move slowly-it could move at 30,40, even 50mph giving little warning, and it would be impossible to evacuate the city, the bridges would close, people would be stuck
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#230 Postby terstorm1012 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 3:07 pm

Two things:

1. I think the sky scrapers would survive intact--without their glass windows. Older buildings tend to be over-engineered...wide bases and all. I doubt highly we'd see the Empire State Building fall over. Storm surge, like in New Orleans, would be the big destroyer in this case.

2. I think NYC city government is prepared---it's the people who don't believe it. In this part of the country we just don't get hurricanes often. Most of our experience is with Nor'easters. NYC city government needs to educate New Yorkers about the threat they face.
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#231 Postby Derek Ortt » Tue Oct 11, 2005 3:11 pm

I heard that the Emipre State building swayed 4 inches in 1938 from the sideswipe from the 38 hurricane. A sway of 12 inches could result in collapse. That structure is one I am more concerned about of a collapse than most of the others
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#232 Postby f5 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 3:15 pm

right now a gigantic terrorist attack is more likely.a NYC hit would affect the entire world.Wall Street,Nasdaq,SP 500 would be shut down for weeks maybe months
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#233 Postby tornadochaser86 » Tue Oct 11, 2005 3:42 pm

yup but is it really possible?
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#234 Postby terstorm1012 » Wed Oct 12, 2005 5:19 pm

Don...did you take into account the inland flooding that would occur in the Delaware and Susquehanna River basins? Your hypothetical hurricane will probably destroy/damage a lot more cities other than New York City.

Agnes in 1972 was a TS but took a similar track, I don't think Harrisburg has ever recovered.
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#235 Postby conestogo_flood » Wed Oct 12, 2005 8:46 pm

Oh my gosh, New England's a deathtrap :eek: .
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