The worse case scenario for Miami-Dade is an Aventura hit.
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The worse case scenario for Miami-Dade is an Aventura hit.
An estimated 25% of Dades population lives in hi-rise condos just south of the Broward county line in Aventura. You can't drive around there on a good day, I can just imagine a derect hit by even a Cat 1 or 2. 
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Brent
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What are the building codes like down there??? Lot of those high-rises are gonna have broken windows.
Last edited by Brent on Wed Aug 24, 2005 10:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The worse case scenario for Miami-Dade is an Aventura hi
sprink52 wrote:An estimated 25% of Dades population lives in hi-rise condos just south of the Broward county line in Aventura. You can't drive around there on a good day, I can just imagine a derect hit by even a Cat 1 or 2.
Well, Aventura is at 25.9, almost directly where she is supposed to head if she stays due west.
If there actually is an eyewall, those huge condos will be in it.
Unless it jogs a bit north which looks less likely at this hour.
26.0 is actually Hallandale which is about 5 stop lights north of Aventura
Last edited by fci on Wed Aug 24, 2005 11:05 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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sprink52 wrote:Brent, the current code is strong but many of those buildings were built in the '60s & '70s before the good codes were law. That area is also surrounded by water and will be vulnerable to surge.
The Tiara, on Singer Island, was ripped up pretty good by Frances last year, and it got probably no more than Cat 1 winds. It was built in 1977, and I remember reading that the exterior walls were basically stucco over styrofoam. Builders got away with a lot back then.

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27N is about the Palm Beach-Martin line. 26N would be a little south of Fort Lauderdale.
Last edited by The Big Dog on Wed Aug 24, 2005 11:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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