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42 points

In California we use wood because it flexes during earthquakes. There may be damage during a big one but at least the house is less likely to collapse on you.

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24 points

In earthquakes in NZ the wooden houses flex for sure. What kills you is the brick chimney falling through the roof.

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13 points
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9 points
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5 points

isnt brick an excellent insulator?

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4 points
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2 points

In Europe we use reinforced concrete for the same purpose. Don’t know if it works but it’s the way it’s done.

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2 points

Wait, are earthquakes common in Europe?!

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9 points

Italy ils pretty shaky, Portugal too. Southern France is waiting for its own Big One.

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-9 points

And also because there’s no snow or serious rain. Took me years to get used to the flimsy houses here, they wouldn’t last a year back in my country.

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16 points

I don’t know about that. I’ve lived in a typical “flimsy” American wooden house in an area that had a lot of crazy weather with extreme winds and even a couple of tropical storms. That house had absolutely no issue with those. These houses are a lot stronger than they look. They flex but don’t break.

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2 points

My house is 80 years old, I’ve personally seen 3 feet of snow on its roof, it weathered hurricane Fran with no damage, hurricane Matthew caused a leak around the chimney that stained my living room ceiling a little.

I’m ready to take anything this area is willing to throw at me except tornadoes. A direct strike by tornado will pull it down.

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14 points
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I live in the Pacific Northwest where it rains quite a bit. Wood houses are fine in the rain as long as the moisture barrier and roof have been installed correctly.

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11 points

Canada also builds houses out of wood. There’s pretty serious snow here and the houses work great.

I also live in one of the the windiest cities in Canada . The asphalt shingles have blown off houses frequently, but the houses themselves are solid.

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-3 points
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I’m pretty sure those wooden houses in Canada are built differently from wooden houses in California. The ones I’ve seen are thin wooden struts covered with some drywall.

Edit: and just saying “flimsy” by comparison to the usual reinforced concrete structures back home. I now own a home in California and it’s definitely solid.

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1 point
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1 point
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I know it is possible to build solid houses out of wood. The ones I’m talking about would 100% not withstand blizzards or tornadoes.

Like most in my native country, I grew up in a building made entirely of solid reinforced concrete slabs, including most interior walls. I could not hear my upstairs or downstairs neighbors and when I saw people punching holes in the walls in American movies I thought it’s just an exaggeration, not something that can actually happen. Wooden houses were culturally associated with poor rural people who couldn’t afford living in a nice solid apartment. That culture persists today, and even in isolated villages new homes are built with concrete structures and brick walls.

When I bought a piece of land and was looking at options for new houses, I found a company making very solid wooden homes (still a lot more solid than the average Bay Area home) for reasonable prices and both my and my wife’s families were outraged at the idea of building a house out of wood.

Just some random background to why I’d use the word “flimsy” for wooden struts sandwiched between drywall sheets.

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