• theturtlemoves [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    22 days ago

    Living trees contain a good amount of water, and so don’t burn all that easily. Wood used in construction has most of their water removed, and so is easier to burn.

    And yes, they build houses with wood in a fire-prone area. Quite the bold strategy.

      • luddybuddy [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        22 days ago

        It is largely due to seismic requirements, yes. Platform framed wood construction is very good in an earthquake. Brick sucks for seismic, and concrete or concrete block can be good for seismic loading, but is expensive. Concrete might pencil out if you were building apartments, but that’s usually illegal in most parts of a west coast city.

        • btfod [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          22 days ago

          Thanks for the reply. The older I get the more I wanna live in a dope concrete apartment building, and I don’t even live in an earthquake or fire risk area… (yet, who knows what’s in store)

            • btfod [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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              22 days ago

              Minus the power lines, give it all a fresh coat of paint/stucco and that would look pretty dope I think.

              Spread some public art and plant life around and I’m nearly there

                  • RNAi [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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                    21 days ago

                    Poor neighborhoods that are ignored/allowed to grow with zero planning by the city government, eventually become a big enough group of problems that the useless dickheads in charge say “alright, lets fix this”. The quickest thing to do is to paint soulless murals and bright colors on the small poor houses to give the impresion of doing something.

                    It’s not intrinsically a bad thing nor necesarily counterproductive to attack the aesthetics first, but since the bigger solutions usually never come, it’s infuriating. It’s the kind of shit CIA larvae rearing centres failsons-lead NGOs do.

                    Something something “poverty romantization”, etc

                    https://www.vice.com/es/article/el-problema-de-querer-combatir-la-pobreza-con-pintura-en-bogota/

          • TheDrink [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            22 days ago

            I lived in Okinawa when I was a kid, pretty much every residential (in the built up southern half of the island at least) is an apartment building between 4 and 8 floors made of concrete. They withstood yearly typhoons and earthquakes so easily that the locals barely even sweated when they happened anymore, and I’ve always wondered why not one capitalist corporation has ever been able to make the calculation that building in a similar way (especially on the hurricane-prone East Coast) wouldn’t make financial sense in the long run.

            • btfod [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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              22 days ago

              Yes… severe storms and tornadoes are unfortunately a factor where I live. I’ve seen neighborhoods here that look just as ruined as the one in the photo, sans ashes… and of course most of the new construction is lumber frame. I even saw a 4 story apartment building go up last year, all lumber. Seemed wild to me. One of the many ill effects of housing being considered a commodity instead of essential to human life, I guess.