I don’t mean double-wides, I mean quality modular houses.

  • ProdigalFrog
    link
    fedilink
    English
    21
    edit-2
    2 days ago

    There really oughta be a hurricane-proof trend, like dome houses, and for the coastline, domes on stilts.

      • @acchariya
        link
        10
        edit-2
        2 days ago

        South Florida is full of these small cinder block houses because everything else gets wrecked and these survive. Sure, they might need some new roof sections, and maybe the drywall cut 4ft from the floor, but porcelain tiles on a concrete slab with cinder block walls is going to last until the rebar rots.

        There’s a house that just went up I saw which meets the recent Florida keys codes, and it is a goddamned fortress. It’s on a lot that is raised 4 ft, the house is made of concrete and sits on 15+ ft concrete pilings, ceramic roof, and high impact windows all around. https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/374-Mahogany-Dr-Key-Largo-FL-33037/104218949_zpid/

    • @over_clox
      link
      82 days ago

      I think they were onto something when they built the pyramids. Like, what’s wrong with making smaller home sized pyramids? The big ones sure as hell proved to stand the test of time.

        • @Alexstarfire
          link
          132 days ago

          Design flaw. They forgot to make the doors openable.

        • @over_clox
          link
          21 day ago

          Whether the pyramids were particularly intended as tombs or not, why the hell do dead people get structures that can last thousands of years? While the living people get to live in structures that if we’re lucky, might tend to last a hundred years, and that’s assuming they don’t get blown apart in a hurricane or burned down or something.

          Seems a bit back asswards if you ask me.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            11 day ago

            Because the requirements are different. Royalty inhabit places designed to last thousands of years (castles), and they are known to be dreadful to live in. Stone walkways and stairs wear and become uneven, shifting foundations create little gaps for drafts to flow in, modern conveniences are difficult to install, if possible at all.

            It is better for living humans to inhabit spaces that can be replaced and updated over time. The dead need things to stay essentially the same, and they don’t wear down the areas they reside in.

            • @over_clox
              link
              11 day ago

              The dead don’t need a damn thing though.

    • @db2
      link
      42 days ago

      How about don’t live where hurricanes keep happening? Crazy thought, I know.

        • @db2
          link
          -22 days ago

          And?

          • @NOT_RICK
            link
            English
            82 days ago

            Let’s move 100,000,000 people, what could go wrong?

            • @ultranaut
              link
              62 days ago

              If it keeps getting hotter and the storms keep getting worse, we will find out. At the very least, property prices anywhere still liveable will likely become even more unaffordable.

            • @AngryCommieKender
              link
              72 days ago

              I’m sure The Cherokee, Chocktaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole Peoples could give us some pointers!

              /dh