Fireproofing Our Future through Better DesignVersion en ligne
California’s Camp and Woolsey Fires caused billions in property damage—and took dozens of human lives. What can we do to improve our homes and buildings to prevent this degree of loss in the future?
1
Building codes are written for fires that begin on the interior of the structure.
Select one or more answers
2
At this point in the video, several design choices have been discussed, including vegetation placement, combustible decks, siding materials, coatings, and vent protection. What is the best systems-thinking takeaway?
3
The video describes noncombustible zones, vegetation maintenance, fire-resistant siding, and protected vents. Which statement best explains how these features connect to fire protection systems?
4
The video explains that wildfire risk to a home is affected by more than the fire itself. Which answer best describes the layered protection approach shown so far?
5
Near the end of the video, the focus shifts from individual homes to the whole community. What is the main fire protection goal?
Select one or more answers
Explanation
While codes focus on interior-origin fires, our challenge in wildland-urban interface (WUI) areas is that these same structures must now perform under external ignition pressures. Understanding this limitation is the first step in effective Community Risk Reduction
Fire protection is layered. Vegetation management, noncombustible materials, ember-resistant vents, and fire-resistant exterior features all work together to reduce risk before firefighters arrive.
These features do not “put the fire out” like suppression systems, but they can reduce ignition risk, slow fire spread, and improve conditions for occupants and firefighters.
The video shows that fire protection is layered. Vegetation, siding, decks, vents, and other building features can either add fuel or help limit fire spread.
The video connects individual building design to community resilience. Fire-resistant construction, defensible space, roofing, vents, and spacing all help reduce the chance of structure-to-structure fire spread.
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