Flood-proofing for Canada's national building code gets U.S. expert's advice - Action News
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Flood-proofing for Canada's national building code gets U.S. expert's advice

The National Research Council has hired a team of American experts to help update Canada's building code to include measures to flood-proof homes and businesses.

Engineer hired to advise Canadian government on how to prepare for future floods

A man flees his home across a flooded bridge in Saint John in May 2018. (Brett Ruskin/CBC)

Canada's national building code has guidelinesfor how to construct homes to defendagainst wind, snow, rain and earthquakes but not floods.

That could soon change.

The National Research Council (NRC) is working onpotential changes to the National Building Code of Canada that would include information on howto flood-proof buildings.

"That's a pretty difficult problem to wrap your arms around," said Bill Coulbourne, president of CoulbourneConsulting, of Annapolis, Md., the team hired by the NRC to help with the building code update.

Coulbourneand his team are"uniquely qualified to carry our this work due to their extensive experience (140 years combined) in the design of flood resistant buildings," said an email statement fromNic Defalco, communications adviser with the NRC.

Coulbourne Consulting will be paid $564,057 for its expertise.

Bill Coulbourne, owner of Coulbourne Consulting, has been hired by the National Research Council to help shape new changes to Canada's building code. (Brian MacKay/CBC)

In Canada, building construction falls under provincial jurisdiction, but the federal government publishesand updatesthe National Building Code to provide a baseline starting point.

Six provinces have accepted the national code as is. Alberta,British Columbia, Ontario and Quebecuse the code, butwith some variations.

This year thousands of Canadians were affected by floods.

Residents along the Ottawa River were forced to evacuate their homes when water levels rose to record levels in May. The month before, the SaintJohn River flooded homes throughout New Brunswick. In July, hay crops in British Columbia were destroyed when the Chilcotin River burst its banks.

The Canadian government says the frequency and severity of flooding will likely increase in the years ahead.

Canadian basements

Coulbourne Consulting has helped governments in the United States craft codes to buildflood-resistantstructures. But Canada's code needs to be tailor-made.

"In the U.S., one of the prohibitions when you're building in a flood plain is that you cannot build a basement," Coulbourne said.

"In Canada, colder temperatures mean deeper foundations for buildings. You pretty much [always] have a basement."

Flooded living room
Hundreds of homes in Windsor, Ont., and Tecumseh, Ont., had their basements flooded after storms pummelled the region in 2017. (Jason Viau/CBC)

For homes built alongside bodies of water, Coulbourne suggestsassumingthat a basement will flood on a semi-regular basis and to planaccordingly.

That would mean using a basement for storage boxes that could be easily moved upstairswhen floodwaters rise.

"[It means] keeping the basement in place but using it as a place to collect water when it floods," he said. "That's not a popular thing to do, as you can imagine. In some cases, that might be half their living space."

Water more powerful than wind

For newer construction, keeping floodwaters out of basements is possible but challenging.

"The force of water is usually a lot higher than the load transferred into buildings from high winds and earthquakes," said Coulbourne."So water can actually exert quite a force on something like a building wall."

The flooded Muskoka River submerges a front-yard flagpole in Bracebridge, Ont., earlier this year. (Jean-Francois Morissette/CBC)

If the structure is built strong enough to withstand the force of the water, the nextstep is sealing every entrance.

"Theeffort in flood-proofing a building is really to search for all those places that water could penetrate the building and figure out how to seal them up," Coulbourne said.

Providing guidance, not writing policies

Coulbourne says his team is not telling the Canadian governmentexactly what its code should be.

"I don't think that's our place. We are going to stay out of the policy conversation as much as we can," he said.

"We are working on reports and guidance documents thatwould provide the NRC with information about what to use and how to consider the current information that's available in Canada."

The NRC saysthe reports and analysis from Coulbourne Consulting "will be provided to codes committees for consideration in future editions of building codes, standards and guides."

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