Global & Disaster Medicine

Hurricane-proofing a Nantucket hospital

EMS1

By Cynthia McCormick
The Cape Cod Times

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  • The 106,000-square-foot, 14-bed hospital is being built to hurricane design specifications established by Miami-Dade County
  • Will allow the hospital to withstand Hurricane Irma-strength winds of 185 mph, rather than 150 mph as specified by Massachusetts building codes
  • Massive 5-foot-by-5-foot concrete footings fortified by mesh
  • Andersen Stormwatch windows
  • A double-hulled exterior building shell will help the new hospital stand up to Category 5 winds
  • Analog and digital phone lines
  • Access to satellite phones
  • The new Nantucket Cottage Hospital won’t even have a basement.
  • The boiler room, currently located in the basement of the existing hospital, will be shackled to the flat roof of the new hospital, including two massive generators
  • Electrical transformer switches will be located on the second floor instead of the first
  • The fuel-pumping room is being built at grade level, but will have waterproof curbing like an inverted bathtub
  • The six-over-six Andersen windows have multiple fastenings and have withstood objects hurled by hurricane-force winds in ballistic tests
  • The shell of the building is constructed almost like two walls, with a water and vapor barrier between the inner and outer skin
  • will have a larger capacity to go days without supplies
  • will have enough food for seven to 10 days and generator fuel for many days
  • will have 27,000 gallons of fuel on-site for the dual-purpose generators, more than three times the current capacity of 8,000 gallons of oil and propane
  • The final cost is estimated to run about $120 million

 

 

 

 


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