Hurricane Michael Property Damage Estimated at $8B

Hurricane-Michael-damage-images-caption-1

MEXICO BEACH, FL 鈥 October 31, 2018 鈥 Hurricane Michael slammed into the Florida Panhandle on Wednesday, October 10 as a strong Category 4 storm with peak winds at 155 mph. Michael made landfall at Mexico Beach, Florida, and as the first Category 4 storm on record to hit the Panhandle, it dealt a devastating blow to the region. Insured property damage from Hurricane Michael could be as much as $8 billion, according to estimates by , not including those losses covered by federal flood insurance. 聽This number is nearly double CoreLogic鈥檚 pre-storm of $4.5 billion in losses.听

Damage from Hurricane Michael on Mexico Beach

Images courtesy of Xactware sister company Geomni.

About half of the property losses occurred in just two Florida counties: Gulf County and , where more than 2,500 structures were damaged and at least 162 were destroyed, according to Fox8 News. 聽In addition to insured property losses, Michael could cause up to $30 billion in total economic losses, according to .

Based on wind speed, Hurricane Michael was the fourth strongest storm ever to make landfall in the U.S. With over 10 feet of storm surge in Mexico Beach and rainfall totaling 7-9 inches across the Mid-Atlantic, Michael caused plenty of flooding and water damage, but the most severe damage was from high winds, according to and other sources.

The structural damage along the Florida coast is unprecedented for this region. Mexico Beach was obliterated, and to the west, nearly all of Tyndall Air Force Base鈥檚 1,340 buildings were damaged, according to .

One contributing factor to the devastation was the tall pines of North Florida, many of which were snapped by the wind and worsened structural damage from Hurricane Michael. Another factor was a history of weaker building codes in the Panhandle than in the rest of Florida, according to of the Structural Extreme Event Reconnaissance Network (StEER).

Florida Today explains that after Hurricane Andrew in 1992, legislators passed statewide building codes to ensure that new structures would be built to withstand a powerful storm, but they also created the 鈥淧anhandle Exemption鈥 to those codes because strong storms are rare in that part of the state. The exemption was lifted in 2007, but structures built to that point were not designed to survive a Category 4 storm, and according to Pinelli, that is evident in the destruction wreaked by Michael.

Cleanfax Staff

Cleanfax provides cleaning and restoration professionals with information designed to help them manage and grow their businesses.

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