WildfiresMitigating fires in the wildland-urban interface

Published 30 May 2013

More than forty-six million residential structures in about 70,000 communities in the United States are located in the so-called wildland-urban interface (WUI). On average, WUI fires destroy 3,000 buildings annually. They accounted for six of the ten most costly fires in the United States over the last 100 years. Five of these fires occurred in California, where the incidence of wildfires currently is up 47 percent this year over last.

Development abutting wildlands places buildings at risk // Source: fs.fed.us

More than forty-six million residential structures in the United States are in areas at risk of wildfires. A new pubication from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) identifies a set of research needs aimed at preventing or managing this growing threat to about 70,000 communities located in the so-called wildland-urban interface (WUI).

A NIST release reports that the top three recommended topics, identified by experts at a 2012 workshop organized by NIST, which warrant sustained research efforts focus on:

  • hardening” buildings, so that they resist ignition — by flames, embers and heat
  • developing standards and tests of building performance that improve the “survivability” of structures exposed to WUI fires
  • improving the understanding of “how vegetation, topography, climate and construction cause structure ignition and spread of fires”

On average, WUI fires destroy 3,000 buildings annually. They accounted for six of the ten most costly fires in the United States over the last 100 years. Five of these fires occurred in California, where the incidence of wildfires currently is up 47 percent this year over last.

The release notes that the workshop provided a forum for wildland-urban interface fire experts to discuss challenges, identify research needs, and establish research priorities to improve the fire resistance of WUI communities. NIST will incorporate the identified research needs into its WUI-related efforts, which concentrate on developing measurement-related knowledge and tools that underpin actions to make communities more resistant to WUI fires.

In addition to distilling research priorities, the new report, Wildland-Urban Interface Fire Research Needs, contains eight overview presentations on the WUI fire problem by stakeholders from industry, research and standards organizations, the fire service and state government.

— Read more in J. L. Pellegrino et al., Wildland-Urban Interface Fire Research Needs, Workshop Summary Report, NIST Special Publication 1150 (May 2013)