• @atempuser23
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    1014 hours ago

    LA has some some of the most pain in the ass building codes and inspectors. A permit is needed for just about damn everything specifically because of fire risks. Set backs and spacing are strongly enforced as well as the use of fire resistant materials. So even if the house were made of ‘cardboard’ they are wrapped in concrete siding or stucco.

    The winds were 60-80 Miles per hour, blown in from the desert. This is a fire in the center of the city, not some remote urban wild interface.

    • @Treczoks
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      212 hours ago

      Nonetheless, all the houses I have seen burning in the news were surrounded by dry trees and shrubs. And those houses burned as well as any other American cardboard houses. Somehow, I see no difference between them and houses with not as strict building codes. So either they only show homes that have been grandfathered in, or those building codes make no serious difference.

      • @atempuser23
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        151 minutes ago

        This is one of those situations where negatives can’t be proved. You are arguing since even code made homes have the possibility of still burning codes don’t make a difference. The loss of property has been great, but some of those homes were battered by wind driven ashes for quite a time before igniting. The loss of life while tragic is low given the extent of the fires.

        As you noted there are no regulations in LA city proper about landscaping . That is likely to change in the future.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        27 hours ago

        My understanding of the situation is the fires are currently burning the historic districts and grandfathered homes. The newer buildings have not been touched yet.

        • @atempuser23
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          147 minutes ago

          That is not true for the Palisades region and Malibu. Most of the homes there would have been newer and they had significant losses.