Episodios

  • S3E5: One Hail of a Trip: Recapping the 2024 Hail Field Study
    Jul 3 2024

    In this episode of Disaster Discussions we sit down with IBHS research scientists Dr. Ian Giammanco, Brenna Meisenzahl, and Jake Sorber to recap this year's hail field study. We discuss this year's active weather pattern that led to a record number of operating days and the characteristics of some of the storms teams were able to survey. We also discuss the nomadic elements of the trip and the logistics of operating a multi-day scientific operation. Plus, we highlight some of the unique field opportunities teams were able to participate in this year, including cross-sectioning and 3D scanning giant hailstones and assisting with verifying a possible new record hailstone. We also discuss how the data collected on the trip will inform current and future hail research at the IBHS lab.

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    1 h y 12 m
  • S3E4: Hurricane Ready with Bill Read
    Jun 5 2024

    In this episode of Disaster Discussions we sit down with Bill Read, former director of the National Hurricane Center, to talk all things tropics as the Atlantic hurricane season kicks off in the month of June. Read reflects on accomplishments during his time as director, discusses some of the challenges he faced, and highlights the successes. We also discuss the active hurricane season forecast, changes coming to the "cone of uncertainty" this season, and how a hurricane expert prepares his own home for hurricane season. Read also discusses his experience installing a FORTIFIED roof on his own home in south Texas.

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    56 m
  • S3E3: Rating the States 2024
    May 8 2024

    Now in its fifth edition, IBHS’s Rating the States  report evaluates the 18 states along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts based on residential building code adoption, enforcement, training, education and contractor licensing. In this episode of Disaster Discussions, we’re joined by Dr. Ian Giammanco, IBHS Managing Director of Standards and Data Analytics and Dr. Milad Shabanian, IBHS Codes and Standards Engineer, to discuss the results of the latest report. The episode covers the history and mission of Rating the States, the methodology used to calculate state scores, and a deep dive into the results. We highlight several states and what they’re doing right to achieve high scores, as well as looking at ways low-scoring states can improve their scores in the next report.

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    41 m
  • S3E2: Unacceptable Loss - Demanding More from Building Performance
    Mar 6 2024

    In this episode of Disaster Discussions our guest host Dr. Ian Giammanco sits down with Dr. David Roueche from Auburn University to discuss where we are in our effort to reduce the damage caused by extreme winds. The two discuss the success story of the modern building codes used along the hurricane-prone coast but also the lack of progress in areas which primarily deal with the impacts of severe convective storms, including tornadoes. During this Disaster Discussions we also delve into what damage modes in tornadoes are the greatest threat to life safety, how different building attributes can act as damage amplifiers leading to even more damage, and the vulnerability of manufactured and mobile homes to tornadoes.

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    1 h y 11 m
  • S3E1: Research and Operations: On a Tornado Damage Survey Together
    Feb 7 2024

    On this episode, meteorologists and wind engineers head to Bamberg, South Carolina to survey tornado damage after a January severe weather event. Join the discussion to explore an example of the operational application of wind engineering during a tornado survey from John Quagliariello and Matt Gropp with the Columbia, SC National Weather Service office. IBHS’s Ali Merhi joins the conversation as well to share research perspectives from the ground as IBHS builds its partnership with local NWS offices and the broader weather enterprise.

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    48 m
  • S2E12: 1-Year Anniversary Podcast Top 5
    Dec 20 2023

    As we celebrate just over one year of our Disaster Discussions Podcast, our staff chose their Top 5 favorite episodes of our podcast so far. These conversations stood out to us as informative and engaging, and we invite you to go listen to each episode in its entirety! Thank you to all of our listeners for making this year plus of our podcast a success. We're looking forward to bring you more insightful interviews from a variety of guests across the industries served by IBHS!

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    53 m
  • S2E11: Water, Water, Everywhere: Pioneering Observations of Wind-Driven Rain
    Nov 1 2023

    Wind-driven rain is not only a nuisance, but a damage amplifier, generating costly water intrusion claims each year. On August 30, 2023, Hurricane Idalia slammed into the Florida panhandle as a Category 3, and IBHS's Research Scientist, Ali Merhi, joined the University of Florida deployment team to deploy IBHS's wind-driven rain observing tower. This presented an opportunity to learn how rain drop size, distribution, and wind affect how water penetrates the building envelop. In this episode, Ali shares his experience on this deployment and how it is only the second such observational dataset of its kind, and we'll learn how these deployments further our understanding of weather's impact on the built environment.

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    1 h y 1 m
  • S2E10: Wildfire Risk Rising - There's More To Be Done
    Oct 4 2023

    We speak with Yana Valancovich from the University of California about her work in educating communities across California and the Western U.S. about the risks of wildfire. Different landscapes have different fuels that can make a community vulnerable to wildfire, so understanding your community and personal risk are key in preparing your home properly. Her on-the-ground perspective from studying events like the Paradise, CA Camp Fire and the Marshall, CO wildfire can be used to educate people how wildfires can evolve. We also discuss how California has heavily focused on wildfire from a codes & policy perspective, but we've still got more work to do.

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    1 h y 13 m