See how this Florida town survived Ian unscathed

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2022
  • CNN's Bill Weir reports from a solar-powered Florida town that endured Hurricane Ian with no loss of power and minimal damage.
    #cnn #news

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @Dennyh025
    @Dennyh025 Год назад +491

    Just the fact that not 1 solar panel got blown away is totally impressive.

    • @mrrey8937
      @mrrey8937 Год назад +2

      but, you havent heard about all the EV's that have been burning for days because they got flooded.

    • @peterphan227
      @peterphan227 Год назад +42

      @@mrrey8937 No that's not true. Today's EVs are IP certified to sustain submersion. In fact, they can withstand submersion far better than gas combustion engines that require air intake to operate. Electric vehicles don't need air intake to run. Their batteries and motors can be sealed.

    • @jflo7674
      @jflo7674 Год назад +16

      @@mrrey8937What's your point?

    • @Joshua-fg8mz
      @Joshua-fg8mz Год назад +23

      @@mrrey8937 oh and gas power ones did just fine right?

    • @mrrey8937
      @mrrey8937 Год назад +1

      @@Joshua-fg8mz Mine is........

  • @kcuzz4091
    @kcuzz4091 Год назад +461

    What a perfect example of a self-sufficient community built to take 150-157 mph winds. This could be the future all over our country if certain people would just start supporting it and working towards this goal. I love it!

    • @whyputaname
      @whyputaname Год назад +10

      👍👍. Agree

    • @Baba-fy1jc
      @Baba-fy1jc Год назад

      In the Next Time comes it harder,that is the begin and not the End ,the Big Chaos is here on the Way that comes in the Future .
      That is all not so good or so Pefeckt and with a Symbiotic with the Nature, has the Human or that all here Nothing to do.
      So can the Nature not Stabilize his Ecosystems, that is here more as good Visible ,but not for all People.

    • @randibgood
      @randibgood Год назад

      The bought and paid for climate deniers need to just stop. Realize they can't take that money with them. And do better for future generations.

    • @jillfeatherman5523
      @jillfeatherman5523 Год назад +1

      Not everyone has sun (or wind) year round.

    • @RodericSpode
      @RodericSpode Год назад +29

      Unfortunately those certain people would rather look to the past instead of create a better future.

  • @jonathananderkin7151
    @jonathananderkin7151 Год назад +210

    The engineer lady gave me chills a very thoughtful lady

    • @luciusrex
      @luciusrex Год назад +16

      ya the moment she says "we build to wind loads and stress tests" I'm like k ya this is a smart town. gotta love it, hopefully more towns like this pop up there in the US and here in Canada

    • @powerboon2k
      @powerboon2k Год назад

      lol like she is the only engineer to think of this...they are rich white people who have built themselves a little utopia away from the riff-raff...they are not to be lauded. If people think this is the answer to climate change then no wonder we are doomed (which we are 100%).

    • @Flordah_man_life
      @Flordah_man_life Год назад

      @@luciusrex not with the maga climate. and I guarantee they all democrats

    • @nottheone582
      @nottheone582 Год назад +18

      i especially liked what she said about not feeling guilty because they were able to help others. imagine if everyone in florida was this resilient? hurricanes would be no problem

    • @ltv..123
      @ltv..123 Год назад +5

      Yeah it’s amazing that they LET women be engineers huh ….Einstein?…………

  • @Cheznrice
    @Cheznrice Год назад +233

    The smart people should not feel guilty for making good decisions!

    • @williamelewis464
      @williamelewis464 Год назад +19

      @@702thomas Lol 😂 Thomas here didn’t make good life choices apparently

    • @taylorfox6436
      @taylorfox6436 Год назад

      @@702thomas Get off youtube and out of your mother's basement and you too could be rich.

    • @TheBlueThird
      @TheBlueThird Год назад +27

      @@702thomas They're not rich and privileged. They just planned for their future by making wise energy (as well as infrastructure) decisions. Other communities can do the same thing.

    • @Metal0sopher
      @Metal0sopher Год назад

      They always do, while the dumb are proud of their bad decisions. This is the root cause of all the world's problems since the beginning of time.

    • @pn2543
      @pn2543 Год назад +10

      America as a whole could be like this if we were allowed to be rational and the MSM did not reward ignoramuses with publicity

  • @highflowerfairy2554
    @highflowerfairy2554 Год назад +41

    He needs to talk about it a lot.
    Florida needs to rebuild using this model. This is beautiful.

    • @loralarose9615
      @loralarose9615 Год назад

      And solar don’t work under ice it don’t snow in Florida wait till a tornado come lol 😂not allow Florida hit the same if the water would one inthey be u see water too and all the poison in the solar panel get in there water 💦

  • @youngum78
    @youngum78 Год назад +306

    Kudos to this community. An environmentally conscious, proactive and progressive community that was prepared. Not exactly what comes to mind when you think of Florida.

    • @sarahjames927
      @sarahjames927 Год назад +26

      Yeah, rich people will have that advantage 🙄😂.

    • @davidrobertsemail
      @davidrobertsemail Год назад +1

      Chinese solar panels made by slave labor.

    • @nicolascardillo7615
      @nicolascardillo7615 Год назад +8

      Florida is a chip and tax-free state, in almost every other state it will cost them 5 times more, takes an extra 5-10 years to make, or out flat they would have not been alow to build it. Sadly as u saw, even when he proposed to build this community the city force him to give the land to them, to pay for those solar panels that cost 1/4 the price now.

    • @bobh1208
      @bobh1208 Год назад +7

      It's possible that this community got it right on the wetlands, and didn't do the typical hit job on Florida of "We will benevolently preserve what we deem the functioning wetlands, if you let us destroy what we deem the nonfunctioning wetlands"... the latter of which, though rarely wet, are actually exactly what is needed, to absorb the water much faster than suburbia can, when you get on the wrong side (the rainy side, in this case) of a super storm... and this community, fortunately for them, was NOT on the rainy side of this storm. Not through any feat of engineering (other than building away from the coast where the storm surge hit... though the scam there can be to buy cheap land in the "outback" and sweet talk the local politicians into extending the urban services district to it, at existing taxpayers expense). So, don't be too sure that this isn't propaganda for other speculators... or that, even IF this community was founded with the best of intentions, that speculators going forward don't try to use its buzzwords without its planning.

    • @ntsakobaloyi6965
      @ntsakobaloyi6965 Год назад +1

      @@bobh1208 Insightful.

  • @sethfroman7044
    @sethfroman7044 Год назад +154

    How all cities in Florida or hurricane prone areas should be built. This is pretty remarkable. Not one damn solar panel breaking is amazing.

    • @myballsitchsomethingfierce6319
      @myballsitchsomethingfierce6319 Год назад +3

      250 billion and it could be done

    • @RedRocket4000
      @RedRocket4000 Год назад

      Florida coast areas will be going under water with sea level rise. And if world does not handle climate change almost all of Florida going under water.
      The actual answer is don't build in flood planes, don't build on the coast and don't build under 50 to 100 ft up. Ports will need Dikes to function.

    • @moonknightj5797
      @moonknightj5797 Год назад +6

      forgetting all the republicans who would cry over big government surveilling their electricity. any form of good change is lightyears away with the politicians here.

    • @moonknightj5797
      @moonknightj5797 Год назад +1

      Rick Scott current senator former governor for the state of florida BANNED the use of the word “climate change” as its destroying his own state. Lightyears away from positive change.

    • @sethfroman7044
      @sethfroman7044 Год назад +2

      @@myballsitchsomethingfierce6319 only about a 1/3 of the annual defense budget lol

  • @kippis05
    @kippis05 Год назад +165

    I live in Babcock Ranch and can say that much of what saved us from what surrounding areas suffered was the redundant water and power utility built underground. This was not mentioned in the piece, but perhaps one of the most important set of factors. It would be great if other communities could model this, but the capital cost of creating systems like these in built up areas is impractical in places like Fort Myers and Naples. Patchworks maybe, but you’ll never get to this type of model unless you completely tear down and start over. And that won’t happen. Imagine if another storm like Sandy pummeled coastal NY. I suspect the outcome would be much the same as it was in 2012.

    • @rennyotolinna2863
      @rennyotolinna2863 Год назад +22

      The kind of answer you give is precisely the same one that the mainstream has given year after year, and then to rebuild and lose lives: it's expensive, insurance, it won't happen to me, why spend... and then what happens happens, lose thousands and thousands, lose lives, etc. Who does not see the best cost/benefit ratio and better living, is because he has a very short vision. Here they are proving those assumptions wrong. It is true that it would cost, but there are better methods that can be applied without rebuilding everything, that is the job of engineering. Everything that hurricanes and tornadoes damage, is unusable, wet and almost nothing is recycled, it just goes to a landfill, that does not benefit anyone but the sellers of construction materials, but not the people and the country, that is with the idea that disposable is better for business.
      And what was mentioned about NY, of course, if nothing is done it can happen again, obviously. But if you can't prevent it from happening, you can minimize the consequences, that's what Japan does, that once their tragedies happen, they look for ways to do it, with quite reasonable results.

    • @mdcbilt4686
      @mdcbilt4686 Год назад +38

      And yet the amazing thing is so much of the infrastructure has been pretty much leveled aka torn down. Rebuild it right this time! (They won't for stupid reasons)
      More importantly don't rebuild on the barrier islands. Strip Sanibel and all the other islands clean and make them a state park.

    • @dcrcort
      @dcrcort Год назад

      youre a republican huh

    • @itsmainelyyou5541
      @itsmainelyyou5541 Год назад +13

      This is the perfect time for many areas.

    • @starshine3588
      @starshine3588 Год назад +11

      kippis05 Finally an intelligent comment. This news story should have explained all this just like you said…but they didn’t because they are only interested in pushing a certain agenda…and the agenda for this report was “solar panels”. They made it sound like because of the solar panels this community didn’t have damage from the storm….when it was the surrounding water areas that saved them from storm surge. Plus the fact that it depends exactly where the storm eye goes in and which side of the storm you are on that determines how much damage you get. I’ve been through many hurricanes and it’s common that one place be flattened while the town 10 or 15 miles away be perfectly fine…maybe a few shingles missing or a few trees down…but this news report fails to state those facts.

  • @mattrobinson47
    @mattrobinson47 Год назад +130

    Babcock Ranch: finally someone was wise enough to build a solar powered community IN FLORIDA where the sun never takes a day off. Good for them!

    • @moniqueengleman873
      @moniqueengleman873 Год назад

      The Republicans will make this a conspiracy theory.
      Well done Babcock.

    • @Baker_king12
      @Baker_king12 Год назад +6

      As a person who lives in Florida….. the sun certainly does take days off. Although my solar panels do their job I’m happy I’m grid tied as there are times my storage doesn’t carry through.

    • @randibgood
      @randibgood Год назад +4

      ​@@Baker_king12 Then you just need more/larger batteries, right?

    • @mrrey8937
      @mrrey8937 Год назад +2

      until a direct hurricane hit comes along. Perhaps the next one, that guy will be saying the same thing, thinking his solar panels are protecting him and he gets a direct hit from a hurricane and a 70 to 80 gusting winds.

    • @ericstevens8131
      @ericstevens8131 Год назад

      No one thinks their solar panels are going to protect them Mr. Rey. No one has said it but you, troll. It was the engineering and construction of the homes that saved them. Apparently the same was true for the solar panels that also withstood the hurricane. Wind speeds of 100mph were reported in Babcock Ranch. Go troll somewhere else.

  • @DEBrown1971
    @DEBrown1971 Год назад +110

    Notice they kept the wetlands WILD...I am betting that their conservation efforts also buffered them from effects of the hurricane

    • @dfloyd2279
      @dfloyd2279 Год назад +9

      Exactly the one thing constantly destroyed in California

    • @aviewer9516
      @aviewer9516 Год назад +17

      ABSOLUTELY! This is where you don't screw with nature and take away things that are there for a reason.

    • @thomthom6268
      @thomthom6268 Год назад +13

      No bet needed. Concept tested and proved. Learn people.

    • @randibgood
      @randibgood Год назад +10

      It's very necessary to keep them, otherwise any storm will erode more and more of the coast and make it more vulnerable. These folks built the right way, that's for sure.

    • @jamescoleakaericunderwood2503
      @jamescoleakaericunderwood2503 Год назад +12

      Absolutely correct... Mangroves are a natural buffer ...read that in a National Geographic magazine 40 years ago

  • @jasonjimerson7046
    @jasonjimerson7046 Год назад +101

    There is a lesson to be learned here, and sadly, I feel most still will not understand what that lesson is.

    • @whyputaname
      @whyputaname Год назад +5

      That's when you refer them to Babcock Ranch Florida..

    • @Rubyclaygirl
      @Rubyclaygirl Год назад

      They refuse to learn, they want to be Right so badly they're killing themselves

    • @elliesummer5249
      @elliesummer5249 Год назад +5

      Yes, live off the coast and build to cat 5 and make sure your electrical is underground..We never lost power where we are either because our power is underground, we lost a couple of shingles and a couple of cedar bushes, but friends of ours lost their homes, vehicles everything here! It has nothing to do with solar…

    • @mantis10_surf85
      @mantis10_surf85 Год назад +2

      Grabcock ranch seems pretty cool and fruity

    • @lillic8522
      @lillic8522 Год назад +2

      It will probably cost more to build in that enforced way - that can be financed with smaller buildings in the beginning. If they need more room, that can always be added, but it is important to have at least a part of the house stormproof.

  • @coleengoodell7523
    @coleengoodell7523 Год назад +66

    This is what build back better looks like. What an amazing engineer and role model. God bless them for helping others during this very difficult time.

    • @powerboon2k
      @powerboon2k Год назад +2

      Are you actually blessing them to God for being rich and having solar power that was bolted down tight?

    • @coleengoodell7523
      @coleengoodell7523 Год назад +8

      @@powerboon2k No, for helping others when they don't have to.

    • @redstarchrille
      @redstarchrille Год назад +1

      @@powerboon2k solar power is not expensive.. if you are not unemployed and live in a poor country

    • @carlfichtner8148
      @carlfichtner8148 Год назад +2

      And what will blessings do for them from the invisible man in the sky ?
      Can gawd help starving children in third world countries ??
      Do 2000 years of praying stop school shootings ??

    • @cosmo2852
      @cosmo2852 Год назад

      @@carlfichtner8148I'm sure the maniac parents of those usual suspects could stop school shootings, if they'd stop spewing violence in their rhetoric towards those who don't hold to their views that they demand.

  • @kismet2354
    @kismet2354 Год назад +20

    And what is amazing is that all their power lines are underground! Bravo 🎉

  • @MrJordanwain
    @MrJordanwain Год назад +111

    That’s a true feat of engineering! Massive respect to the engineers behind the community. I dare say it’s rated for much higher power storms.

    • @bobh1208
      @bobh1208 Год назад +1

      Admirable goals when gone about honestly, which I'm not questioning has been done in this case... but, to be honest, the south side of Ian, which had the onshore winds, and thus caused the storm surge obliteration on Ft. Myers Beach, was much drier in terms of rain than the north side of Ian, because dry air had gotten wrapped around the west and then south side of the hurricane, from above the front to the north. So, they just got lucky in terms of flooding... although if they truly have preserved all the wetlands on the property, any flood would have eventually ebbed somewhat sooner than otherwise... but, the flood damage to the houses would still have been similar (though there are of course plenty of more reliable reasons to preserve wetlands).

    • @whywhywhy1266
      @whywhywhy1266 Год назад +2

      @@bobh1208 Great analysis. This story is very misleading.

    • @unclequack5445
      @unclequack5445 Год назад +2

      Please, this is no miracle only the very edges of the storm hit here; no way did shingle roof's stand up to 155 mph winds sustained it didn't happen.

    • @snookman9920
      @snookman9920 Год назад +2

      @@bobh1208 Agree 100%. This story is BS hype.

    • @adamstevens1204
      @adamstevens1204 Год назад

      Build 35 feet above sea-level. Fucking brilliant

  • @L._Diaz
    @L._Diaz Год назад +72

    I love this! If I ever had to move to Florida this would be the place and this alone.
    This is the kind of engineering every town needs across America.❤

    • @KevinP32270
      @KevinP32270 Год назад +1

      AGREED.

    • @maumor2
      @maumor2 Год назад +5

      Babcokc has been there for almost 20 years and not that many buyers. Why move to Florida to live 40 miles away from the beach? might as well come visit once a year for a couple weeks stay in a nice beachfront hotel and go back home

    • @bluegold21
      @bluegold21 Год назад +2

      Makes one wonder why DeSantis isn't using this as a vote winner. He truly seems useless as a politician.

    • @janelis156
      @janelis156 Год назад

      @@bluegold21 because the rest of the south west coast is destroyed

  • @mpinline1
    @mpinline1 Год назад +10

    Nobody mentioned the most important point on why they never lost power - their electric wires are underground. Nothing for the wind to blow and snap. Just like in Japan.

    • @kismet2354
      @kismet2354 Год назад +1

      In Singapore too! No ugly messy power lines dangling above roadways anywhere in that amazing City State.

    • @touch2ndgen
      @touch2ndgen Год назад +1

      You can still lose power with underground wiring,

    • @kismet2354
      @kismet2354 Год назад

      @@touch2ndgen but chances are WAAAAAAAYYYYYY better that it won’t happen as proven by multiple countries all over the World unlike backward America.

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад +1

      It's expensive to bury power lines, especially over long distances. That's why distributed power generation, like the the solar system at Babcock Ranch is critical. The cables are shorter and carry less power, therefore they can be smaller and they suffer less transmission loss.

    • @kismet2354
      @kismet2354 Год назад

      @@gatoryak7332 ….and it’s “cheap” to constantly repair down lines; fires & death that may occur with the above scenario? Not to mention the inconvenience to households when Blackouts occur as a result of electricity disruptions? Give me a break! Small wonder the United States grid system is the laughing stock of most forward thinking & advance Countries around the World! It’s positively archaic!🤣😂

  • @pn2543
    @pn2543 Год назад +33

    wow, this needs to go viral!

  • @lauraholzler1417
    @lauraholzler1417 Год назад +51

    Jennifer Langlow is my hero! I've heard about your community. You guys kick butt!

  • @blondine4802
    @blondine4802 Год назад +8

    Inland towns like Lehigh acres Immokalee, Ave Maria, were fine. It really only hit the coastal areas

  • @bernadettehomerski3561
    @bernadettehomerski3561 Год назад +47

    I do hope their experience and their knowledge will be transferred to those who will be working on the rebuild!

    • @knyghtsword
      @knyghtsword Год назад

      Honestly it's sad but I seriously doubt this lady engineer would be consulted. They want to build back quickly probably not really thinking about doing it differently.

  • @pn2543
    @pn2543 Год назад +17

    700,000 solar panels, 150 Megawatts, 2000 homes, wow,

    • @334honda
      @334honda Год назад

      And no homeless on the sidewalks or in tents.

  • @joeanderson8839
    @joeanderson8839 Год назад +34

    Every community should be built to withstand the storms of the present and storms of the future. It is possible.

    • @citypavement
      @citypavement Год назад +2

      Anything is possible with enough money. Although I agree with you, it's politically impossible to get the kind of agreement you'd need for that.

    • @redstarchrille
      @redstarchrille Год назад

      @@citypavement There is already subsides for green power. But rebublicans that have money in the oil industry is fearing they will lose their money. So it's constantly under attack.

    • @RedRocket4000
      @RedRocket4000 Год назад

      Yes if you build 100 ft up otherwise sooner or later the total melt off of all ice will put you under water and maybe more than 100 ft. I dont' see Global Warming being stopped.

  • @davidwelty9763
    @davidwelty9763 Год назад +3

    The solar power was not the saving grace, it’s the fact that the power lines were underground. Lakewood ranch just north of Fort Meyers is not solar but has underground power lines kept the power on as well.

    • @joshualieberman2265
      @joshualieberman2265 Год назад +1

      Also helps that they are literally 25 miles inland and got hit by a mid catagory 3 hurricane at best and felt no storm surge because of how far inland they were

  • @markreed9853
    @markreed9853 Год назад +3

    Did anyone notice there were no cables on poles above ground, well not that I saw anyway? - it's the way we do local power and phone lines here in the UK as well.

  • @davefoc
    @davefoc Год назад +93

    This is an awesome story. A part of the disaster for Florida that hasn't been talked about much is the possibility of a vast reduction in property values because a lot of Florida will be judged as uninhabitable in the face of more common hurricanes and rising sea levels. These people have pointed the way for a kind of construction that might make that less true.
    Also, loved the structural engineer. I was an engineer that grew up at a time when women engineers almost didn't exist. I thought that might be because women for the most part couldn't be engineers. Alas, one more thing in my life that I have been massively wrong about and I'm happy about that in this case.

    • @digiryde
      @digiryde Год назад +15

      lol - I have a very feisty mother. She always said there are two things women cannot do that men can do.
      1) Be sperm donors.
      2) Make men grow up.

    • @ianhomerpura8937
      @ianhomerpura8937 Год назад +5

      Lower property values would be great in solving the housing crisis though. Yes please.

    • @Berahlen
      @Berahlen Год назад +4

      @@ianhomerpura8937 Not if the property values everywhere safer go _up,_ and the values in risky areas tank so much that nobody's willing to develop any more than places to shove poor people to die in the next hurricane. Property values absolutely need to go down, but that particular way will just make inequality even more lethal.

    • @cindyjohnson5242
      @cindyjohnson5242 Год назад +9

      @@digiryde I told my girls that too!! One is an BSEE, one is MS biomedical engineer, one is an MSRN. I pushed the math and science!

    • @digiryde
      @digiryde Год назад +7

      @@cindyjohnson5242 Good for you! My mom was a elementary science teacher. My father a Physics teacher. She was a teacher back in the days when being pregnant was a bad moral message (yeah, even if you were married), and single female teachers were considered 'loose' if they were around men without a chaperone.
      The good old days... May God save us from ever going back to those days again.

  • @shalinitrivedi7571
    @shalinitrivedi7571 Год назад +2

    As a civil engineer, gotta love how CNN just completely glossed over the whole interconnected lakes part. The solar panels would have been useless if they'd flooded. That's the key to the whole place - managing the water!

  • @ritaperdue
    @ritaperdue Год назад +41

    This is the future folks!
    Please let's ALL get on board 😍

    • @Rosie05610
      @Rosie05610 Год назад +2

      Can you make solar panels without fossil fuels?
      Meanwhile, you can't have renewables without fossil fuels. Materials derived from petrochemicals are critical to the production of solar panels, wind turbines, and batteries. OH but on the other hand, and seventh, a world with both fossil fuels and renewables could make the world cleaner and the planet healthier.

    • @julialaw6471
      @julialaw6471 Год назад +1

      If you can afford the 40k to install your solar panels. He's lucky his roof didn't come off!

    • @ritaperdue
      @ritaperdue Год назад

      @@Rosie05610 do you know that anything plastic from oil can be made with hemp? Yup, oil crap going the way of the dinosaurs 😍

    • @ritaperdue
      @ritaperdue Год назад

      @@julialaw6471 they are way cheaper now, unless you fall for someone ripping you off

    • @jacob.forrest_
      @jacob.forrest_ Год назад

      @@julialaw6471 100%. Solar used to be very expensive in the old days. However, nowadays it’s completely different. Instead of paying your monthly utility bill, you simply pay a lower monthly bill that stays fixed. You’re just replacing your current bill for a lower one instead of paying thousands out of pocket.

  • @Hgood1
    @Hgood1 Год назад +11

    This video should be seen by every American, especially science deniers.

    • @rebeccadubois8270
      @rebeccadubois8270 Год назад

      It probably wouldn't matter.
      Because if you didn't come to your conclusions through evidence.
      Then no evidence is going to make that person change their mind.
      Anti science is rampant in USA :(

  • @twmayo714
    @twmayo714 Год назад +13

    Looking at how upright the young trees are, this town did not sustain anywhere near 150 mph winds. Being inland really protects you from the majority of damage.

    • @glenagarrett4704
      @glenagarrett4704 Год назад +4

      Did you not listen to the story? Babcock Ranch not far inland, is only 12 miles from Fort Myer. It got hit the same. The advantage was not distance, it was deliberate planning using wetlands to protect from storm surge long with being located about 25 ft average above sea level combined with protected power infrastructure (engineered solar & underground lines).

    • @twmayo714
      @twmayo714 Год назад +6

      @@glenagarrett4704 I promise you the advantage was being inland. Underground utilities are very important. Solar is cool, but one can look at the trees in this video and tell that they did not get anywhere near 150 mph winds. Storm surge did most of the damage in this storm and they were too far inland to get that

    • @huszarokkyzhe3695
      @huszarokkyzhe3695 Год назад +3

      @@glenagarrett4704 I was in the eye wall for Hurricane Ian for 6 hours straight, in the Northwest quadrant, where we had sustained winds of 180+ mph. Gusts were marked over 200 and after that, they had malfunctioned because of the storm pressure. Babcock ranch saw NOTHING of the likes that the coastal areas saw. I don't care if it was 15 miles from Fort Myers. Babcock ranch is a huge community and I would venture to say it spans over 20 Square miles. The moral of the story is not that they survived because of preparation, they survived merely because Babcock Ranch wasn't Fort Myers Beach or Sanibel.

    • @glenagarrett4704
      @glenagarrett4704 Год назад +2

      @@twmayo714 Granted they are a bit further inland but they still got a lot of it. And way less damage than if they had not been prepared with good engineering and protetected power supply.

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад +4

      Why are so many of you whining about the community being a few miles from the coast? That is a smart strategy - one of many that the developers of Babcock Ranch implemented.

  • @Marvin-fn7ks
    @Marvin-fn7ks Год назад +3

    Sandoval community in Cape Coral which is only about 3/4 mile from the gulf waters had very little damage and no storm surge . I think the man made interconnected lakes and modern home construction made a big difference there. They were without power for a few days . Babcock Ranch is newer and much further inland which helps . Drainage is so important in these areas.

  • @siestam44
    @siestam44 Год назад +18

    This would be extra impressive if it was in the flood zone. We fared about the same here in West of I75 in Sarasota, just lost power for 2 days so the solar part is great. Point is Babcock Ranch is so far inland that the story isn’t as extraordinary as it appears.

  • @firebird2
    @firebird2 Год назад +80

    Babcock Ranch should get more exposure! (Sorry, pun intended - I would love to hear more about this community and it's engineer).
    This is not your grandfather's solar tech, but a real time demonstration of what is possible in the 21st century.

    • @whyputaname
      @whyputaname Год назад

      Yes, 👍👍

    • @powerboon2k
      @powerboon2k Год назад +1

      Do you have any idea the amount of money/privilege you need to live there? And wtf was your "grandfathers solar tech"? My Grandfather grew up on a farm and burned peat to warm his house. Live in the real world for a bit sometime.

    • @vysharra
      @vysharra Год назад

      My grandfather was a Missouri dirt farmer. He was lucky to have electricity at all. This is the future of rich people being insulated from the consequences of their unsustainable lifestyles.

    • @firebird2
      @firebird2 Год назад

      @@vysharra there are always nay sayers, complainers and critics who want everyone to live hard lives. Look at common place things today that were once "only for the rich" - airplane travel, automobiles, telephones, computers, heart transplants, and so on and so on.
      Research and development is expensive. At first only wealthy people have access. Do you think this is a good reason to shoot down innovation?
      Fifty years ago solar technology was very basic and actually not expensive, but it wasn't practical in extreme weather conditions. This community survived a-once-in-500-year storm. Isn't that incredible? It shows that all the people who say renewable, "clean" energy is unreliable that the technology exists to make this a better alternative to the past ways of buildung. The world is changing and there are many innovative ideas that respond to these changes and are proving to be worthwhile.
      But hey, don't dream, don't applaud creative ideas, look back not forward it is no skin off my back.

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      @@powerboon2k I hate whiners. How about you?
      And yes, I do know how much money one needs to live in Babcock Ranch, because I looked at their website. There are houses and condos that go for more than $100K less than the national median house price.

  • @Julesong
    @Julesong Год назад +14

    Better keep an eye on disaster relief funds - follow the money. Make sure those funds go to disaster victims and not into politicians’ pockets. Any contracts made for disaster relief need to be checked over for legality, process, nepotism, and illegal conflicts of interest.

    • @Metal0sopher
      @Metal0sopher Год назад +4

      Easy way to prevent all that corruption, make sure the housing regulations require all homes to be built like in this video, and then no one will need disaster relief funds. This is why we need MORE regulation not less, but rich people hate regulations because then they can't steal as you describe. Regulations are laws to stop corporate thieves. It's been like this for decades. Why do Americans have such a hard time understanding this?

    • @whyputaname
      @whyputaname Год назад

      Florida is know for Corruption.. All's one needed was a PO Box to scam Medicare..
      Then there is Gov DeathsSantis and Florida GOP Legislators using 12 million plus Taxpayers dollars to kidnap Immigrants and send them up North..

    • @jp9910
      @jp9910 Год назад

      @@Metal0sopher You can't be that uninformed

  • @ra8937
    @ra8937 Год назад +8

    Wow! What an architectural and civil engineering win! Amazing! The entire country can be this. I literally just got my tesla solar and battery installed a week ago. So, this story makes me feel good. But over all just very impressed with this developer and this community. Good job.

  • @ricci8497
    @ricci8497 Год назад +3

    This is the standard to which housing shops and offices in such areas that are prone to extreme storms should be built to a lot of heartache would be saved on can it fail yes but the more areas that survive the quicker life returns to normal.

  • @0230Raveena
    @0230Raveena Год назад +5

    Absolutely impressive. This is a prime example of building smart and sustainably to combat the increasingly devastating effects of climate change. Built by engineers who use science as their foundation.

  • @lizz1102
    @lizz1102 Год назад +16

    Wow! Fabulous story! Same thing here in Colorado where we can get some scary hale storms. You'd think hale would decimate solar panels but they actually protect roofs!

    • @sparkleevenmore9638
      @sparkleevenmore9638 Год назад +1

      Depends on the size of the hailstone but hail does indeed destroy solar panels

    • @allwheeldrive
      @allwheeldrive Год назад +1

      @@sparkleevenmore9638 Would love to see the info on that. Please provide! Thanks.

  • @veronicapeart-johnson3531
    @veronicapeart-johnson3531 Год назад +1

    Maybe this is how communities should be built back in Florida. SMART 👍🏽

  • @sarahlachman1349
    @sarahlachman1349 Год назад +1

    The community MUST be the blueprint for the areas destroyed by Ian.
    Build Back Better, and smarter

  • @DarkKnightLady
    @DarkKnightLady Год назад +4

    We lost power for 5 days but I have ecoflow solar generators. Was really nice to have a mini refrigerator and extra power to charge the tv,and our devices. Small solar setup that give some comfort in the days.

  • @annmarieknapp2480
    @annmarieknapp2480 Год назад +4

    This gives me hope. We can think ahead and be better prepared.

  • @odonovan
    @odonovan Год назад +2

    For those who don't know, Babcock Ranch is a community for the wealthy. The average price for a two bedroom house there would get you a four bedroom in an average area. Notice the guy interviewed had a Tesla and a Jaguar in his garage. How many of us can say the same? Of course, people with money can buy "hurricane rated" homes. Most of the rest of us will never be that fortunate.

  • @drena2671
    @drena2671 Год назад

    Spoken well ....Humble and Helpful 🙏🏽

  • @janhankins911
    @janhankins911 Год назад +9

    The thing is making this stuff affordable for people. I'd love to live in that little community, but I bet I couldn't afford it (and my husband and I aren't poor, we're very middle class, but I'd be not wealthy enough to live there).

    • @nightbest2308
      @nightbest2308 Год назад +1

      The cost of the stuff is affordable it is the labour that kills most persons. Also in some states they make you either sell all your solar generated electricity back to the electric company at a lower rate then you buy it or if that is not the case forces you to maintain a connection to the grid which costs money which add a cost.

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      @@nightbest2308 I'm a huge proponent of solar power and worked in the industry for years. First, there are no areas that I am aware of that force individuals to sell all their power back to the utilities, unless the the utility or the local government paid for the solar equipment and its installation. In that case, the customers are allowing the utility to use their roofs in exchange for a discount on their power bills.
      Forcing utility companies to buy power at the same cost that they sell it is irresponsible and unsustainable. The utilities, by law must maintain transmission grids. Those are the same transmission grids that transmit electricity from one person's house to somewhere else one the grid. Utilities also must build, operate, and generation facilities that are sufficient to power all customers in times of no sun, and the system must work with close to 100% reliability, 24hrs/day, 365 days/year. If they are forced to buy electricity at retail rates, then they wouldn't have enough revenue to build and maintain the generation facilities and the transmission grids.

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      If you afford a $300K home, then you live there with money to spare.

  • @patticake5944
    @patticake5944 Год назад +7

    An x footballer giving his own money to help. That's a refreshing idea.
    From the looks of the trees.... they didn't have a direct hit, but still, nice work.

  • @annmarieknapp2480
    @annmarieknapp2480 Год назад +2

    I got solar months ago. Praying it will hold. Glad to see it worked down south.

  • @philemfulloflead
    @philemfulloflead Год назад +8

    Pretty cool. Would be nice to throw money towards stuff that ensures our survival instead of stuff to destroy us. I really can imagine a world where energy is just a switch flip away. Still tho this place is lucky. It's like where you see a tornado hit a town, making a path of destruction but decides to leave a house or barn or shed in its path unscathed. Really boggles the mind looking at the destruction around and seeing something that should look like all the rest.

  • @jval75816
    @jval75816 Год назад +6

    I hope we can all live like this!

    • @334honda
      @334honda Год назад +1

      I bet they don't let people sleep on the sidewalk or in tents be there in town.

  • @Hail_Sagan
    @Hail_Sagan Год назад +15

    Very cool town, but they are too far away and did not get the worst of the storm like the areas a little closer to the coast did. I know many people even in parts of Fort Myers, well west of i-75, who also didn't even lose power or internet either. Having said that, glad to see Babcock was fortunate to have been spared the full brunt of hurricane Ian.

  • @bakenumber4
    @bakenumber4 Год назад +3

    Job well done Bill.

  • @YouD0ntSay
    @YouD0ntSay Год назад +2

    Building houses with bricks and mortar instead of plywood and plaster board also helps.

  • @writerme
    @writerme Год назад +7

    A lot of people don't understand that collectively, we are all going to be paying for people to re-build their houses in the same locations, after the hurricane destroyed them (talk about Socialism!!). Private insurance is not going to pay for it because the private insurance companies in Florida have either gone out of business or refuse to cover flood damage. So those people are going to use federal programs to pay for the damage to their houses, which we all contribute to, through our taxes.
    So, we should mandate that those people rebuild their houses more sustainably, or provide building code updates to lessen the burden on the federal government whenever a hurricane rolls through to devastate Florida because it's going to happen more and more often, due to Climate Change. This community is proof that it can be done, but builders aren't going to do it on their own; they need to be REQUIRED to build their communities better.

    • @brentharrington9235
      @brentharrington9235 Год назад

      Was with you until you stated talking nonsense about climate change.
      Even the US government disagrees with you.

    • @lynnjenkins8732
      @lynnjenkins8732 Год назад

      @@brentharrington9235 you are one of those climate change deniers, and that's exactly why if you live in Florida your shit is now underwater.

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      @@brentharrington9235 So you are still denying climate change due to global warming? That takes a huge leap into willful ignorance. The data clearly illustrate that the climate is changing. Even Republicans have acknowledged that. The few holdouts are some Trump cultists. And then there are the people who know that the climate is changing but make a big show of not believing it, because that would make the liberals right. Which are you?

  • @comebackcodplayer8248
    @comebackcodplayer8248 Год назад +10

    This is difference between folks who prepare for disasters versus othera who are reactive.
    The more you reduce a problem ahead of time the less you have to cleanup ans repair In the long run.
    Prevention = long term time saver.

    • @digiryde
      @digiryde Год назад

      "This is difference between folks who prepare for disasters versus othera who are reactive."
      So, basically, there are people who plan ahead and everyone else? ;)

    • @mlee6842
      @mlee6842 Год назад +1

      Pretty expensive for most of us though.....sad to say....

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      @@mlee6842 And waterfront property in Ft. Myers is not super-expensive?

  • @aaronaustrie
    @aaronaustrie Год назад +1

    This is true definition of resilience!!

  • @whatsthepoint6667
    @whatsthepoint6667 Год назад +12

    The whole world needs qualified people like this...🙏👍

  • @rebeccamd7903
    @rebeccamd7903 Год назад +10

    This is amazing. I hope it becomes affordable for everyone.

    • @malcolmjelani3588
      @malcolmjelani3588 Год назад +3

      Im sure its for rich folk

    • @redstarchrille
      @redstarchrille Год назад

      @@malcolmjelani3588 There is alway caves for the poor people :D

    • @malcolmjelani3588
      @malcolmjelani3588 Год назад

      @@redstarchrille there will always be the poor

    • @ashelycharles9148
      @ashelycharles9148 Год назад +2

      Babcock Ranch didn't take a direct hit.. I live where it did.. its a crap story

  • @tsimoi273
    @tsimoi273 Год назад +3

    Is this Florida? Unbelievable!

  • @mwm48
    @mwm48 Год назад +3

    Civil Engineer here…I love this.

  • @pn2543
    @pn2543 Год назад +2

    Note - the reporter does not clarify that Babcock Ranch did NOT get the full 150 mph winds NOR the storm surge, they are 30 miles inland so only got 80 mph winds and no storm surge, its a little bit disingenuous not to mention this

  • @sosoutherncustomequestrian4598
    @sosoutherncustomequestrian4598 Год назад +1

    I visited that community last spring and it was amazing. Food for thought for sure!

  • @KelvinMarcano
    @KelvinMarcano Год назад +4

    👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾how much more proof do we need that this works

  • @JohninTucson
    @JohninTucson Год назад +11

    I live in a 34 foot class A RV with the roof covered in solar panels, and a huge Lithium battery bank. I paid a lot of $$$ to do it so I could run everything (including AC, fridge, etc) without ever having to run my generator. I live in SE Arizona and we have had some amazing electrical storms this summer that have continually knocked out the power down here. I NEVER lost power since I am off-grid, and I never started my generator even once to top up my battery bank, and I never altered my lifestyle to save power either. People laughed at me, calling me a fool for spending a lot of $$$ in order to be able to do this - yet who's laughing now??? It's too bad that folks don't understand the value behind living off-grid. No power bill and the ability to live in total comfort year-around is a no-brainer in my opinion. I'm sorry the people in Florida are suffering from the hurricane and wish them peace moving forward. Perhaps we'll see more folks adding this simple solution of adding solar and a large Lithium battery bank when they rebuild their homes, it's a terrific way to live and know that you will be just fine when the power goes down for days to weeks at a time.

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Год назад

      How many amp-hrs is your battery bank to support AC in Tucson? When it's 95 at ten oclock at night are you still running your AC? I have been in and out of that city for many years and always marveled at how few people take advantage of solar. I am on solar for 25 years in Idaho but we almost never need AC, so it's super easy and cheap to go solar, esp with advances in LEDs.

  • @miam1074
    @miam1074 Год назад +2

    this is amazing!

  • @MommaDee23
    @MommaDee23 Год назад +1

    12 miles in Florida can make a world of difference in any given direction. It may not have been the way this community was built as much as where it was built.
    We live in Lakewood Ranch, northwest of them, and although we were built as a "green" community, we're not as green as they are, and yet were just as fortunate in that we did not lose power, got flooded, or had serious, if any at all, structural damages. We did have our share of fallen trees, ripped pool cages but all very minor.
    It's about time that any and all new development is sustainable. Nature will show it's appreciation and not take you down.

  • @tobarstep
    @tobarstep Год назад +3

    There's nothing affordable about living there. We looked up some of the home prices and the various fees and dues they pay. Between mortgage, insurance, and community fees you're looking at like 5k _minimum_ per month.

  • @sharrein5327
    @sharrein5327 Год назад +3

    Amazing

  • @puppycat58
    @puppycat58 Год назад

    How amazing is this....a well thought out town...with all those solar panels...unbelievable

  • @Bobby_Digital37
    @Bobby_Digital37 Год назад +6

    This was awesome!

  • @billabong1621
    @billabong1621 Год назад +3

    This community yes it has a lot of amenities inside of it but they don’t tell you how far it is away from the coast how far away it is from everything else. To me personally it feels as if I’m driving in the middle of nowhere and then all of a sudden this place appears. Sorry to say but if this community was near the coast I don’t believe it would have held up. However I am glad it did and that they can help provide assistance for those in need right now.

    • @steven4315
      @steven4315 Год назад

      Wow, it's almost like building on the coast in a hurricane zone might be a bad idea.

  • @user-km2bz8iy5o
    @user-km2bz8iy5o Год назад

    Fascinating stuff. we need more of these stories~!

  • @nickwoo2
    @nickwoo2 Год назад +2

    If only if it was more of a mixed use development with transit. Looks like a car dependent suburb. Awesome engineering though!

  • @facitenonvictimarum174
    @facitenonvictimarum174 Год назад +4

    Yeah those solar panels are great against hurricane force winds, storm surges and flood waters.

  • @nickisnyder3450
    @nickisnyder3450 Год назад +10

    Thank God for science and facts. I have been saying all along that while we all feel sorry for the people who lost their lives and possessions florida's poor planning is inexcusable. How can you live in a flood plain that is under 100 feet above sea level and not prepare for flooding? How can anyone live in a manufactured home or a trailer in a hurricane zone?

    • @terri6745
      @terri6745 Год назад

      Cost

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Год назад

      Double wide 2 blocks from the beach.....what the hell do they think is gonna happen?

    • @floridaskiffcompany2558
      @floridaskiffcompany2558 Год назад

      My area will not allow a trailer to be replaced once it has been destroyed. There were a few old snowbird trailer parks that have been around since the 60s. This area it is pretty rare to catch a big storm. But obviously hurricanes don’t follow rules

  • @jrbland18
    @jrbland18 Год назад +2

    SENDING PRAYERS TO ALL

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      Should've done that before Ian hit land.

  • @jasonb4988
    @jasonb4988 Год назад

    Blessed indeed ..

  • @snteag
    @snteag Год назад +7

    Oh my gosh! This is amazing!! So impressive.

  • @debrakleid5752
    @debrakleid5752 Год назад +1

    My ex lives near Tampa and started building his own solar powered panels and we got most of the house under the solar panel except for things like air conditioning. It was quite impressive but we had the solar panels on the ground and not the roof so I doubt they would do well in a hurricane. I live on the east coast of Florida in Volusia County and we got hit very hard by Ian even though we are several hours from Lee County. We got the northeast part of the storm which is always usually very bad and that included Ian. Ian was just enormous and when he came in with his first band of rain and wind it kept going for 2 1/2 days. We were one of the last to get rid of Ian but also one of the first to get him I think. We got well over 2 feet of rain and the wind got very nasty as well. I think we had cat 2 and 3 winds for a while before Ian was knocked down to a tropical storm just south of us when the eye was in Brevard County. They did better off than we did. Most counties I think did better except for Lee and some counties hit by Ian’s eye on the west coast. Major flooding here but we got lucky in that our place was in just the right spot that the flood reached our back doors but didn’t get into the porch or house unlike many of our neighbors. We had turtles, fish, and ducks swimming down our street that turned into a river. We have never seen anything like it and we lost 5 people to Hurricane Ian with at least one drowning in his own home. Some homes had over 4 1/2 feet of water

  • @kathrynhall7021
    @kathrynhall7021 Год назад +1

    LOVE THIS TRUE STORY!!!
    ABSOLUTELY INCREDIBLE

  • @jimsecrist4222
    @jimsecrist4222 Год назад +5

    my solar panel here in northern mn is at a angle where snow dosent stick it has and can rotate to get direct sun its cool and all but i only use it during summer time / store energy from it icase bad snow event

  • @kenuiq
    @kenuiq Год назад +4

    This needs to be sourced and spread if found to be sustainable!

  • @houghtonstreet3392
    @houghtonstreet3392 Год назад +1

    My name is Ian and I am very kind

  • @corey6393
    @corey6393 Год назад +2

    Those are million dollar homes with multi million dollar infrastructure. Not exactly attainable, affordable or sustainable. Had they been right on the coast, none of it would look as nice as it does, and it would have suffered greatly from the storms just like every place else.
    Also, the story makes it sound like solar power stopped flooding. Really?

  • @BorahaeBitch7
    @BorahaeBitch7 Год назад +5

    Need to know how much these houses cost and what exactly they're made of, if not concrete and reinforced steel, to withstand those winds. Also, I get how the wetlands protected from flooding but what are these "interconnected links" they're referring to?

    • @luv2dancesalsa465
      @luv2dancesalsa465 Год назад

      $500,000 - millions plus HOA fees
      this is a wealthy community because... TRAILBLAZERS usually have to put their money where their mouths are. And I'm grateful they have done just that.
      now the REST OF US may eventually benefit from this 'experiment'.
      ALSO... vote for Democrats because they are science believers rather than deniers. It's sad it's even a political issue. The GOP has had its chance(s) and they have proven over and over again THRU THEIR ACTIONS that they really don't care about people. Most of us have >50 people to care about and we do a better job of protecting them. {sad sigh}

  • @floridaskiffcompany2558
    @floridaskiffcompany2558 Год назад +3

    Would be interesting to see how it hold up if it were to actually be hit by a hurricane. This area got touched by the outer bands at best. On the Southeast Quadrant. After spending 5 days handing out food and supplies the devastation was unreal. If this took the wind Englewood/Port Charlotte sustained unbroken. I would have to imagine all those panels would be gone. You could definitely see a difference in new construction over the old houses. I saw a new weakness in the soffits of the newer houses though. The roofs stayed on and the windows held. But the wind blew the soffits in and pressurized the attics. Blowing the ceilings down. From the outside the houses looked pretty good. But inside was a mess.

    • @chetmyers7041
      @chetmyers7041 Год назад

      Wow, I've heard of windows blown inward by winds, but never heard of pressurized attics and inward exploding ceilings. I understand the physics, just never heard of it happening.

  • @wafflesmomforlife9215
    @wafflesmomforlife9215 Год назад +1

    Wow, that is WONDERFUL!!!

  • @ravenrpg3865
    @ravenrpg3865 Год назад +17

    I'm wondering if it was closer to the shoreline if it would have been the opposite. That would be the real test. Either way this is fantastic.

    • @whyputaname
      @whyputaname Год назад +7

      They shouldn't have never been allowed to build on the shoreline because of the damage that the storms can do.. It's not the Wind and Rain that kills it's the Surge of the Ocean..

    • @nottodaycolonizer3257
      @nottodaycolonizer3257 Год назад +2

      @@whyputaname exactly

    • @enellburnett8981
      @enellburnett8981 Год назад

      Agree

    • @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288
      @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288 Год назад +4

      No, stop testing Mother Nature by building on the shoreline!! She's trying to tell you something, why won't you listen? Shoreline should be public space and wildlife/wetlands preserve. That way everyone can enjoy it. Build your fabulous house away from the beach and walk a few blocks.

    • @ravenrpg3865
      @ravenrpg3865 Год назад

      @@girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288 you're referring to "you" as if I had a house there or I was responsible for them building it.

  • @walterschwab4616
    @walterschwab4616 Год назад +3

    True! Live in ga Atlanta n see none of that money being used in or throughout any part of Georgia or City for that matter scam...

  • @reginapotts5244
    @reginapotts5244 Год назад +2

    This is Awesome!!! It is possible to be self-sufficient even with solar! It proves Self-sufficiently can be attained in many ways! As so many who are living a totally self-sufficient life, “Eating straw, walking to work, and living in a Yurt” as the Correspondent states, is not the alternative to going solar! Just saying!

  • @601salsa
    @601salsa Год назад +2

    Awesome. This is how America could rebuild whilst future proofing for more storms...... and with no comfort sacrificed.......

  • @ecamp6360
    @ecamp6360 Год назад +4

    Great story, yes. There are often cases like this. There was that one house in Panama City(?) on the Panhandle that survived 'cause it was concrete and had barriers to divert the storm surge. Houses on stilts in Louisiana. We need better codes or to move off the coasts.

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      We need better code enforcement.

    • @V.E.R.O.
      @V.E.R.O. Год назад

      A blue house in Ft Myers Beach also survived without any damage, all others around it were destroyed.

    • @signalfire6
      @signalfire6 Год назад

      They OBVIOUSLY didn't take a direct hit. The trees and foliage are still intact. This is really not an honest (five minute long, wow, really in depth there...) reporting. And the houses are ridiculously expensive. It's a millionaire's hideout. So many questions - what are their insurance rates like? Are they less because they're 'safer'? Florida's insurance situation is a disaster and will only get worse now. And the HOA fees are ridiculous, here's the $$ for the cheapest condo now on sale there: Annual Association Fee: $7,080
      Association Fee: $919
      Association Fee Payment Frequency: Quarterly
      Hoa Master Fee: $420
      Hoa Master Fee Frequency: Quarterly
      Price Per Square Foot: 250.89
      Property Taxes: $1,000
      Tax Year: 2020

    • @signalfire6
      @signalfire6 Год назад +1

      @@gatoryak7332 We need codes that allow people to build/site 'tiny homes' in areas where if a disaster threatens, they can bug out, house and all, without worrying about what a week or month in a hotel will cost. Without having to go into a shelter with 1000s of other people, children and pets. Without relying on the Red Cross or the kindness of strangers. Without needing the Coast Guard to rescue them with a helicopter. We need codes that realize not everyone is a millionaire and that some people are living on the edge financially. We need reality, not Republicans who think the Orange Geezus is some kind of saint and not a psychopath. We need voters who pay attention. We need lots of things...

    • @jp9910
      @jp9910 Год назад

      You live in fantasy land. First off most people don;t have a gas guzzling truck to tow this mini home to the parking lot of an interstate. Then the storm shift the projections change and what all them just return without interfering with those who need to now evacuate. So instead of some old geezer who can't find his way across the stage and took showers with his daughter after puberty I'll take the orange guy. Further more it's obvious you don;t live in Florida because you make no sense when it comes to this topic.

  • @4ctina246
    @4ctina246 Год назад +14

    This is amazing!!! What a great job they did planning this community. “The technology is here, we just got to get everybody on board and make it affordable” well done 👍🏽

    • @joanne4758
      @joanne4758 Год назад +2

      4Ctina - I can't believe how surprised everyone is - this is 2022 - we got subsidised panels on a couple of years ago. It's a brilliant system. Unfortunately you have a lot of sceptics to work with. Good luck.

  • @jeffreyserette
    @jeffreyserette Год назад +2

    Look at the trees. It is clear this place was not impacted by the full force of the storm. You don’t have to look very far inland in the Cape Coral/Fort Myers area to see those not impacted very heavily by winds or surge and flooding. Even directly on the beach. Take a look at the house reported on at the North end of Fort Myers Beach. The more I look into that house and other houses surviving the storm, the more interested I become. I hope there are many more that worked just as good as this one appears to have. I'm sure there is damage but Looks like the ground floor performed exactly as intended in those instances. Would love to find out how they are all built and materials used. Some are simply incredible. I feel for those that have experienced loss from hurricane Ian, and those that are persevering are also those I find so inspiring. Not saying these places aren’t built well, they clearly were not directly impacted. Land conservation is important, but like solar, it’s only a part of the equation. Like it or not nothing is more efficient than the grid. I wouldn’t want to pay the electricity costs our friendly Canadian neighbors to the North or what many overseas pay. Unless they are a fully contributing part of the grid, solar developments like this and individuals buying into it are not making it more efficient or cost effective for anyone but those few. Something about this report seems very passive aggressive towards those in the communities directly impacted. I for one certainly don’t like that.

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      I will offer a different viewpoint. Look at the trees and other plants. It is clear that the landscape of "this place" was thoughtfully designed to withstand Florida storms. Look again where the video show so of the common areas. Some of the trees did suffer their leaves being torn off. My guess is that those tree will survive just fine. Look again, this time at the end where the reporter is in a destroyed area at the waterfront near Naples. Do you see the trees in that shot? Healthy trees that show no damage. That's what native trees do - survive tropical storms. So do lots of other plants. And that's why landscape architects use them in Florida.
      Your comment, " Like it or not nothing is more efficient than the grid." is just plain wrong. The best thermal power generating plants are less than 40% efficient. Transmission grids lose electricity with every mile of wire, every substation, every pole mounted transformer. The fact is that the power grid is only considered 'efficient' when compared to internal combustion automobiles.
      Finally, it would behoove you to actually read about the electrical generating system at Babcock. It is operated by Florida Power & Light, it is connected to the grid, and it produces more power than the community uses.
      "Unless they are a fully contributing part of the grid, solar developments like this and individuals buying into it are not making it more efficient or cost effective for anyone but those few." This statement makes no sense. First, what do you mean by efficient? Second what do you mean by cost effective? Third, if a person installs solar energy on his property but doesn't connect to the grid, how is that detrimental to anybody? I can think of several way that it is beneficial to everybody, even the utility company. And why would anybody care how cost-effective it is for that person to have solar electricity on his property? What business of theirs is this?

    • @jeffreyserette
      @jeffreyserette Год назад

      It's an interesting development for sure. I did not know it was operated by fpl. The efficiency of the grid is the overall efficiencies of scale, meaning the number of consumers. Even notable building science contributors like Martin Holladay have returned to the grid, and I like this quote from one of his articles titled Hooking Up to the Grid, "Grid-tied houses are far more environmentally friendly than off-grid houses. Once a house is connected to the grid, there’s no need to operate a gasoline-burning generator during the cloudy days of winter. Fortunately, Vermont’s electricity grid is a low emitter of carbon-so our grid electricity is much cleaner than the electricity produced by a Honda generator."
      By no means am I saying these places could not of survived a full impact like those that suffered complete destruction from the wind, rain, and storm surge. It looks to me there are many examples that did experience a direct impact and still performed exactly as intended. I am fascinated by the methods of construction that allowed those to survive ALL of the forces from this storm. This report made it sound like they were in one of those areas but they were not. They did say they were about 15 miles inland. Are there any completely destroyed areas 15 miles inland except for flooded areas?

    • @gatoryak7332
      @gatoryak7332 Год назад

      @@jeffreyserette I am a professional energy engineer. I am aware of Martin Holladay. I've read or heard him enough to know that he often says things that are not well thought-out. Consider the example you gave of the grid vs. a backup gasoline generator. Yes, the grid is more "efficient". I'll grant you that even though you don't define what efficiency means in this particular case. But backup generators don't run 24 hours every day. To make a meaningful comparison, one would have to consider a year's worth of hourly data, including all the electricity that is solar-generated. That's the kind of thing that Holladay didn't do, as far as I know. I wouldn't be surprised to find out that he doesn't know that studies like that are routinely done nowadays. I've been doing it since the early days of desktop computers. (Do you remember the TRS-80?) When I corresponded with Holladay using examples of actual projects that showed a different perspective than Holladay had, his response was always, "No, I'm right and I will not consider your real-world experiences because they are anecdotal." He never indicated any interest in the science and engineering that went into those anecdotes that have been repeated by me hundreds of times and in many thousands of projects that have been done by other people.

  • @kcuzz4091
    @kcuzz4091 Год назад +7

    What I'm curious about, is if this community had been closer to the beaches of Ft. Meyers, would it have survived so well?!! If such a community was to be built need the beach would the homes have to be raised up to prevent flooding, and would the solar panels have made it through Hurricane Ian?!!

    • @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288
      @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288 Год назад +8

      What I'm curious about...why do people NEED to build near the beach? Those building permits should not be written. Notice that this community retained a chunk of open land; that was likely a huge source of protection, especially because it gives a place for water to go. Concrete built surfaces cannot absorb water. Learn the lessons already. Everyone wants to brag about a fabulous house on the beach???? Really? Not a goal for the future. The beach should be preserved for wildlife and wetlands. Let Mother Nature do her job.

    • @22steve5150
      @22steve5150 Год назад

      A part of the design of the community was use of wetlands and connected pond and lake systems to absorb much of the surge so their flooding would be mitigated. That means they can't build these types of structures right up on the beach like that, for those sorts of structures they would likely need to be on stilts or otherwise elevated structures with concrete or cinderblock walls for the bottom floor and ability to use sandbags or anti-flooding caulk/sealant or some other method for temporarily sealing the bottom floor door and window openings watertight so that even if the storm surge is higher than the stilts, the water won't get through the bottom floor's walls.

    • @fosheezy98
      @fosheezy98 Год назад

      Given everything else discussed that was likely taken into account as a bad idea for what the goal was.

    • @user-oz7bx4tx8e
      @user-oz7bx4tx8e Год назад +1

      Like I said this community is more inland. Massive new hurricane proof homes on Sanibel and Fort Myers beach did not survive. It is also about location

    • @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288
      @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288 Год назад +1

      Big part of being "hurricane proof" is not building near the beach.

  • @pepeshopping
    @pepeshopping Год назад +3

    This is an EXCEPTION, as most other places and solar farms are NOT built that well.
    But it’s the difference when you build it yourself vs some contractor that just wants your money.

  • @monkeysluvdani
    @monkeysluvdani Год назад +1

    This is a great selling feature for towns like this

  • @wsmith4906
    @wsmith4906 Год назад +2

    Too far away from the coast to have any storm surge. Only got 40 percent of the 20 plus inches other spots further north got. That being said, an impressive report on other counts. Especially on never losing power!

  • @sandyjamison5929
    @sandyjamison5929 Год назад +5

    *Fan-Freaking-tastic!* 🙂🤗❤️

  • @kathleenaustin327
    @kathleenaustin327 Год назад +5

    Did the storm go over the town?!! No damages is amazing!!

    • @Mondfischli
      @Mondfischli Год назад +2

      ... presumably their roofing carrying the panels is more solid than average 🤔

    • @moniqueengleman873
      @moniqueengleman873 Год назад +3

      Super well built houses with low lying solar panels. There is a way to do good things for the environment AND your family.
      You can poo poo solar power all you want, but I live completely off grid and my solar works like a dream.

    • @touch2ndgen
      @touch2ndgen Год назад +1

      It also helps being inland

    • @ayina111
      @ayina111 Год назад +1

      70-80 mph, still strong wind. But no damage. Still very impressive

  • @unclequack5445
    @unclequack5445 Год назад +2

    Obviously, this area was never hit with 155 mph winds of course there's no damage.

  • @rennyotolinna2863
    @rennyotolinna2863 Год назад +2

    As a non-resident of the USA, I always wondered why year after year hurricanes pass by, destroy huge amounts of buildings and properties, only to be rebuilt relatively quickly but under the same conditions and techniques, how a a first world country. with the best engineering did not learn from what happens It has intrigued me a lot.
    Answers I had heard, from construction costs, the chances of being hit by the weather vs. how much I have to pay, insurance... but I see that almost everything is wrong, these people here show a better way. The same goes for territories with tornadoes, which always suffer from the same thing. The answer as to why it happens then? is political, or economic, the builders and sellers of construction materials like keep things as usual?