ResilienceImproving national resiliency: Joplin tornado 5th anniversary

Published 23 May 2016

Disaster struck Joplin, Missouri, on 22 May 2011, when the deadliest and costliest single tornado in U.S. history left a 22-mile long path of destruction. The storm killed 161 people, destroyed some 8,000 structures, and left $2.8 billion in damages in its wake. In the five years since the tragedy, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has led the effort to learn from the devastation and make improvements based on those lessons so that communities nationwide can become more resilient to tornadoes, significantly reducing both deaths and property damage.

A small sample of the destruction wrought by the Joplin tornado // Source: weather.gov

Disaster struck Joplin, Missouri, on 22 May 2011, when the deadliest and costliest single tornado in U.S. history left a 22-mile long pathof destruction. The storm killed 161 people, destroyed some 8,000 structures, and left $2.8 billion in damages in its wake. In the five years since the tragedy, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has led the effort to learn from the devastation and make improvements based on those lessons so that communities nationwide can become more resilient to tornadoes, significantly reducing both deaths and property damage.

NIST says that NIST’s technical investigation of the 2011 Joplin tornado was the most comprehensive study ever of a tornado event. Based on its findings, the agency made sixteen recommendations for improving how buildings and shelters are designed, constructed and maintained in tornado-prone regions, along with improving the emergency communications that warn of imminent threat from tornadoes.

Most important, the study was the first to recommend that standards and codes be developed and adopted on a national basis for making communities more tornado resilient.

NIST is marking the fifth anniversary of the Joplin tornado by highlighting the progress made, with collaborators, toward realizing the improvements proposed in its study. One major achievement was the approval of the first code change based on Joplin study recommendations, requiring enhanced protection for new school buildings and additions to buildings on existing school campuses in the nation’s most tornado-prone regions. Ongoing work includes:

  • Creating more detailed, science-based and accurate tornado hazard maps for the United States (to support standards on performance-based, tornado-resilient building designs);
  • Upgrading the Enhanced Fujita scale for tornadoes based on advanced techniques for wind-speed estimation;
  • Developing guidance for community-wide public alerts in emergencies;
  • Drafting standards for better selecting buildings to serve as storm shelters;
  • In collaboration with FEMA, publishing improved guidance for designing community and residential tornado safe rooms, and developing new guidance for determining the best available tornado refuge areas within existing buildings; and
  • In coordination with the NOAA National Severe Storms Laboratory, developing a new tornado threat communication system. NIST continues to work with the appropriate codes and standards development organizations, such as the American Society of Civil Engineers, the International Code Council and the National Fire Protection Association, to use the study’s recommendations to lay the foundation for nationally accepted standards and improve model building codes. NIST also is working with organizations representing state and local governments—including building officials—to encourage them to consider implementing its recommendations. These include calls to develop and adopt:
  • Nationally accepted performance-based standards for the tornado-resistant design of buildings and infrastructure to ensure the resiliency of communities to tornado hazards;
  • Standards for designing and constructing essential buildings—such as hospitals and emergency operations centers—and infrastructure to remain operational in the event of a tornado;
  • Design methods that will ensure all building components and systems meet the proposed performance objectives;
  • Uniform national guidelines that enable communities to create safe and effective public sheltering strategies; and
  • Nationally accepted codes and standards, as well as uniform guidance for clear, consistent and accurate emergency communications.

For more information on the Joplin tornado investigation, and a half-century history of lessons learned and utilized from NIST’s structural failure and fire studies, check out the NIST Disaster and Failure Studies Program Web site.