Hurricane Ida made landfall as a major hurricane on the Louisiana coastline on 29 August 2021. It generated damaging winds and storm surge causing widespread damage to structures and to power and telecommunication infrastructure throughout Louisiana. Major damage occurred in the south-east low-lying region. Hurricane Ida’s most severe flash flood impacts occurred in the New England states, and accounted for 51 of 67 fatalities currently attributed to the storm. Ida made landfall on the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s landfall, but it was a more compact storm, extending only about half the diameter of Katrina. Hurricane Ida’s peak winds were 18 to 50 mph below the minimum design wind speeds that were in place since Louisiana adopted its first statewide building code in 2007. Despite this, structural damage and catastrophic failures occurred within all building ages, categories and structural systems, including single-family and multi-family residential structures, commercial buildings, schools, critical facilities and hospitals, bridges, roadways and port facilities, airport hangars, roadway bridges and high-tension electrical truss towers. This project encompasses the products of StEER's Tier 3 response to this event: a joint Preliminary Virtual Reconnaissance Report (PVRR) - Early Access Reconnaissance Report (EARR) and Curated Dataset.
Prevatt, D., S. Kameshwar, D. Roueche, B. Rittelmeyer, T. Duarte, T. Heo, H. Ibrahim, S. Klepac, O. Lafontaine, T. Lin, L. Manuel, S. Pilkington, Y. Pinyochotiwong, J. Santiago-Hernandez, S. Strader, K. Gurley, T. Kijewski-Correa, K. Mosalam, I. Robertson (2021). "StEER: Hurricane Ida Joint Preliminary Virtual Reconnaissance Report-Early Access Reconnaissance Report (PVRR-EARR)", in StEER - 29 August 2021, Hurricane Ida. DesignSafe-CI. https://doi.org/10.17603/ds2-w6km-fe51
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Date Published
2021-09-22
DOI
10.17603/ds2-w6km-fe51
License
Open Data Commons Attribution
Description:
Hurricane Ida made landfall as a major hurricane on the Louisiana coastline on 29 August 2021. It generated damaging winds and storm surge causing widespread damage to structures and to power and telecommunication infrastructure throughout Louisiana. Major damage occurred in the south-east low-lying region. Hurricane Ida’s most severe flash flood impacts occurred in the New England states, and accounted for 51 of 67 fatalities currently attributed to the storm.
StEER deployed a three-person FAST, equipped with a street-level car-mounted panoramic camera, unmanned aerial systems (UAS), and other equipment. Meanwhile, an 11-member Virtual Assessment Structural Team (VAST) gathered data through reported news, social media outlets, and the National Weather Service, etc. The first product of the StEER response to Hurricane Ida is this Joint Preliminary Virtual Reconnaissance Report (PVRR) and Early Access Reconnaissance Report (EARR), which is intended to: (1) provide an overview of Hurricane Ida, particularly relating to wind speed and storm surge impacts on the built environment, (2) overview the regulatory environment and construction practices in the affected area, (3) summarize the preliminary reports of damage to residential infrastructure, schools and critical infrastructure, power and telecommunications, (4)
establish post-event conditions in affected areas with respect to access and services, (5) provide a summary of the 3-day field survey of affected areas, (6) provide recommendations to inform the continued study of this event by the engineering reconnaissance community. Note that all observations and findings provided in this EARR should be considered preliminary and are based on the limited scope of the FAST.
File Name
Field AssessmentPreliminary Virtual AssessmentVirtual Reconnaissance