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diy-tornado safe room

14K views 32 replies 8 participants last post by  DFrost 
#1 ·
As others here, I not only live in tornado alley.but I also had one come to close for comfort.i finally ended up with the well needed materials needed to turn/convert the hall closet floor into a tornado safe room and stock it with a few items.only thing is, I didn't think of before and during pics. I'm using my smart phone. So I don't know if I can upload the after pictures or not.the closet walls are done with 1x6 or 1x8.the plywood is 3/4.i do need to go with a catchment for getting some of the item's out of there,just to make a lol more space in there Dog Dog supply Dog breed Comfort Carnivore
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#2 ·
Good idea.

I did something like that when we bought and remodeled our home some years back. Only I did it under the basement staircase. When the original owners built the house they placed a 6x6 post at each corner of the stair case set into the cement. I ran a sort of header to securely attach the posts together. I then used 2x6's to frame out the underside and to reinforce the steps then added numerous heavy duty foundation anchors. On the outside of the "room" I used 1x6's stacked tight and screwed into the studs, then I put up flat wire mesh before installing sheet-rock. On the inside I put in styrofoam insulation and then plywood. The door is a solid core exterior door with reinforced hinges and strike plate.
 
#4 ·
Sounds like you did it up right sentry.

Redbeard. I went with what I had on hand, and know what will work,up to a point. Seeing how my resources are limited.
 
#8 ·
Tornado safe rooms are built to stay even if the rest of the house gets completely blown away. They typically have deeper and thicker steel reinforced concrete foundations than the house and then steel reinforced concrete walls and ceiling. You can find the specs and reasons for them HERE.
Wood frame and plywood is not strong enough to completely protect you.
 
#12 ·
That statement is dependent on where you live, what levels of Tornado you face, the geography of where you house sits, etc., etc. The local university's engineering department has built many storm shelters using reinforced wood that have proven themselves worthy of any weather we face. You don't need an MRAP if the bad guys are only shooting arrows at you and you don't need a $50,000 sub-basement shelter if you never get hit with EF5's.

 
#9 ·
That depends on the tornado,and how close gets to the home, buissnes or whatever.homes and other structures survived the tornado that touched down not to far from here. I do admit that was a EF2 tornado.and that it didn't go over each Structure.but yet each person must plan accordingly with their finacil situation.
 
#13 ·
From the looks of the map. It looks like my hall closet is good as it needs to be until it comes to the door.its one of the older type doors.
 
#14 ·
How many EF5s does it take? Your map shows that they are possible over a large part of tornado alley and the eastern US. The question I ask is can it happen? Then you can build a shelter rated for EF5 within your budget. A below ground concrete block shelter with the walls and roof filled with concrete and steel reinforcing is much stronger in an EF5 than a closet with wood frame tied into the existing house.

There has not been an earthquake larger than M7 in the Seattle area for over 200 years but 317 years ago the Cascadia Subduction Zone cause an M9+ earthquake that wiped out entire tribes of American Indians. Since that time we have built Concrete super highways, underground utilities and airports all over the area. When it lets loose over 1.5 million people will be trapped without transportation, water, food or sewers. It will take years to repair just the water and sewer lines so how many people will die? There is just no way to prepare for that disaster - which is why I left the area. There will be some effects where I am but those effects will only last days and not years.

There is no reason to place yourself in danger, or remain in harms way unless you can protect yourself. Storm shelters have been used for centuries and we have learned how to make them work. You can lean from history or relive it.It is cheaper to learn from it.
 
#16 ·
Then you can build a shelter rated for EF5 within your budget.
That ain't within my budget.and if it were. Then I'd already have what I'd consider to be a tornado safe home.instead of living in a rent home.
 
#15 ·
I could also have installed a long term nuclear fallout shelter built into a sub-basement, built an Arc in case it floods, hired a seismologist to determine my risk of tectonic plate shifts, installed a fire proof sprinkler system around my property, wear a parachute all day just in case, mount dual mini-guns in my attic with retractable gun ports in case of zombie attack, etc., etc., etc. but instead I opted to just use common sense in determining what my needs are and then took steps to meet then.
 
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