Tech Company To Build Science Ghost Town In New Mexico 198
Charliemopps sends this excerpt from an AP report:
"New Mexico, home to several of the nation’s premier scientific, nuclear and military institutions, is planning to take part in an unprecedented science project — a 20-square-mile model of a small U.S. city. A Washington, D.C.-based technology company announced plans Tuesday to build the state’s newest ghost town to test everything from renewable energy innovations to intelligent traffic systems, next-generation wireless networks and smart-grid cyber security systems. Although no one will live there, the replica city will be modeled after a typical American town of 35,000 people, complete with highways, houses and commercial buildings, old and new."
The hills have eyes. (Score:2)
Just don't take any shortcuts on your road trip in that area.
Re:The hills have eyes. (Score:4, Funny)
If they're going to do nuclear testing there, you could always hide in a fridge and be safe.
It will be a magnet... (Score:2)
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"How will they be kept out of all those uninhabited buildings? They may look uninhabitable to people with a place to live, but to the homeless, they might look not too bad."
Hippie communes, perhaps. But regular hobos or homeless need food and alcohol, and they need other inhabitants to get those things. So they tend to gather where there are people.
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Amen brother.
I know several nomads that most rich idiots call "homeless". they live in a van (nice van!) or small RV and travel the country from job to job and living a life of freedom.
Honestly, if the economy gets any worse, I'm going that route. Liquidate everything, buying a mid sized RV and handing the keys for the house to the bank telling them to "suck it leeches"... In fact looking online a lot of people are doing this kind of lifestyle change.
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Just because your home MOVES doesn't make you HOMELESS.
I'd argue that living in a 'nice van' is still homeless however.
Having lived in a RV for a rather long time, I highly doubt you'd think it was nearly as great as you do now.
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Class B motorhome is by definition a "nice van"
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I know several nomads that most rich idiots call "homeless". they live in a van (nice van!) or small RV
Don't be stupid. According to that logic, someone who lives on a houseboat is "homeless", which is obviously wrong and stupid. Your "home" doesn't have to be a permanent structure, just some kind of shelter that provides a few amenities such as a toilet and a sink.
A "homeless" person is someone who doesn't have a home, plain and simple. Not a permanent structure, not a home on wheels, not a floating hom
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...for hobos and other mobile homeless. How will they be kept out of all those uninhabited buildings? They may look uninhabitable to people with a place to live, but to the homeless, they might look not too bad.
Don't need a floor for testing? Don't waste time and money building one.
The place could be infested just like a city park. But it should be less of a problem than an abandoned tract of mcmansions, and they seem to be doing fine.
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Roving bands of heavily armed children. IF you don't feed them then you eliminate the need for body disposal as the children will eat the hobos and trespassers.
Problem is what do you do with the children that get older and are chased out of town?
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Roving bands of heavily armed children... children will eat the hobos and trespassers.
Given my experience living in New Mexico, this will happen on its own. Just put the city next to Espanola.
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Other than the fact that its to be built in the middle of the desert?
First off, the homeless won't have a way there.
Second off, they won't have water when they get there.
Third off, they won't have food.
Fourth, and this is by far the most important, their won't be anyone else there for them to beg money from to buy the above things. Its really hard to leech off of other people when there are no other people there.
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...no one, or very few people at least, are going to consent to having their current homes leveled to make way for it, whatever the it is.
Two words for you: eminent domain [wikipedia.org].
I see two things happening (Score:5, Interesting)
1) Lots of movies will be shot there.
2) Lots of squatters will move in and create a real life issue of the morality of building a vacant city that can house 35,000 people and not letting homeless people stay there.
~Kactus
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You wouldn't want to move under a bridge either, but that's what some homeless people do.
I agree with the original poster though. You want to build a test town? Well at least have it help some people besides your R&D department.
Anyway, I bet they'll have water because there will be a bunch of R&D wonks working there.
Unfortunately, I think we're wasting time here. Something t
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Maybe you should watch "Call of the Wild" [wikipedia.org], a documentary about a guy named Chris McCandless who tried this in Alaska back in the 90s and died. Don't bother with the Sean Penn movie about the same subject, as its conclusion was wrong; he didn't die of poisoning at all, he died of malnutrition.
99% of the general population is simply not able to live in wild areas. There isn't enough food there (it certainly isn't "abundant"), and what food there is, most people aren't very good at catching. Do you really t
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3) All the fridges will get stolen.
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But... where can Indy hide for the nuclear blast then??
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You forgot 3) All the fridges will get stolen.
Also (4) In this Ghost Town, all the clubs in this will be closed down (due to too much fighting on the dance floor).
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We are working for the owner class of course, so they can grow richer, and we can grow poorer. The leaches at the top of society are siphoning of the boom of wealth that we have created through our labor. During this recession, profits are higher than ever and the wealthy grow richer while the middle class are financially gutted.
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In the past, at least, they realised where the cow was that gave the cash... Now it seems like they are doing all they can to liquidate it.
Based upon the theological leanings of most of the power elite, I expect this last ditch effort to destroy everything is only a symptom of apocalypse mania.
It should be interesting, post 2012 when we are all still here and having to function, how they're going to deal with that. You can only last inside your bomb-proof shelter so long before the zombie mobs break in t
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It wouldn't be empty with 35,000 Slashdotters moving in and it would be impossible to think with the heavy memeon flux. I mean every sentence would have to start with "In Soviet Russia..." and end with ", you insensitive clod." People wouldn't have discussions, they would just restate what each other said, changing a word or two and appending "FTFY." And they'd all be broke because no one has figured out the "???" step yet.
Hmm (Score:2)
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I see no reason why they could not outfit 35,000 peoples homes with kit. Real world data has to be worth more.
Re:Hmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Just a guess.
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I'm not sure how to fit a water recycling system backflow into a car analogy just yet; but I'm sure we can give it a go.
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I'm not sure how to fit a water recycling system backflow into a car analogy just yet; but I'm sure we can give it a go.
Perhaps:
It would be akin to running your exhaust through your air vents?
Just a shot in the dark to help you out =D
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Because burning down 35,000 real homes when your molten salt solar energy storage system fails, or having your water recycling system backflow bad water through the tap is a bigger problem when you fill them with families of 4?
Even "normal failure" needs to be covered up. If it takes 50 revisions to get your SDHW panels not to leak, the last thing you want is 50 families whining on facebook and twitter about how revisions 1 thru 49 of your new panel design leaked water all over their priceless scrapbooks.
Also payment negotiations with a zillion individuals would be a huge PITA.
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Well, it's a salvation for construction companies. Now, they can keep building houses without the need of selling them.
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Its about time (Score:5, Funny)
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That sounds all too familiar...
1. Let's abuse group A very badly
2. We make it up to them by giving them land
3. We give them terrible land in the desert
4. They open casinos and make some money
5. We tax said casinos...
6. Profit
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This sounds even more familiar:
Slashdotter makes marginally funny comment.
Another Slashdotter misses the point entirely and tries to rebut the post by trying vainly to force some semblance of logic and intellect in it.
Then another Slashdotter comments on the above.
Meanwhile, an obscure component manufacturer somewhere in the Pacific Rim announces a major order for some new bleeding-edge piece of technology that could conceivably become part of some expensive, digital-lifestyle-enhancing nerd toy.
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Many miles away something crawls along the shore of a dark, Scottish loch.
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Those Crashtest dummies have been demanding a homeland for compensation for decades of abuse and maltreatment in the workplace.
When asked to respond to today's news, the crash test dummies' spokesman said "Mmm mmm mmm mmm."
Field of Dreams worst nightmare (Score:2)
Only a scientist could understand the need to test outside a sterile laboratory environment full scale with the hubris to mock Reality by charging for it and then certifying the inanity soliciting a self-serving kind of captive tourism to pay rent while caught in its nightmare
Why build a brand new ghost town (Score:5, Funny)
They should just use Detroit [time.com]: it's already built, it's realistic and it's a lot larger than a 35,000 inhabitant city.
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This article lists Riverside/San Bernadino a having the worst outlook for recovery of the housing market. http://www.businessinside [businessinsider.com]
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After having lived in both NM and Las Vegas, I can contrast and compare the two fully. Where NM is sparse and full of local communities; the surrounding Las Vegas area is jam packed with people. (Problematic if you truly want a ghost town.) The real crux, how ever, is that NM has much more progressive policies. NM has tons of science all around the state. Los Alamos was built to design the nuclear bomb. It also has a nuclear waste repository (WIPP), a world-class tech/engineering college (NMT), Sandia
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And before I'm flamed...Yes, I know this isn't a prospectus for a government program. But, it has the definite 'feel' of a government program. It simply wouldn't fly anywhere near Las Vegas.
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Looks like your economic system isn't that effective.
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Looks like your economic system isn't that effective.
Yes it is [wikipedia.org]. It's very effective. For some people. Just not most people.
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I think you are bang on. Control.
Though to test driverless cars you need cars with drivers at some point for the driverless cars to avoid.
Also, Google already runs autopilot cars in cities. They are not driverless, but the driver is only there in case the autopilot fails, otherwise he's just another passenger.
-nB
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They should just use Detroit: it's already built, it's realistic and it's a lot larger than a 35,000 inhabitant city.
I'm thinking things are going to be turning around for Detroit real soon. Sarif Industries [wikia.com] just started there a few years back, they're going to be huge.
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I was thinking why not http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cordova,_Alabama#Present_Day_Cordova [wikipedia.org]
Or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greensburg,_Kansas [wikipedia.org]
Or any number of other places. I love the idea of building a town from the ground up. I just hope that put in a trolly system. Up till the 1950s every major city in the US had a trolly system. Maybe get Google involved as well.
What we are talking about is what EPCOT was supposed to be except Walt was going to have people live there.
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It's creepy that the map in the time's article displays the cemetarys as being 100% occupied.
It means they are zombie-free. Every grave has a body. It's a good thing.
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It's creepy that the map in the time's article displays the cemetarys as being 100% occupied
Well, somebody has to make sure the mayor wins re-election.
Prior examples (Score:2)
I've read about plenty of them in a "chick or the egg" situation: commercants don't want to settle because there are no clients. Residents aren't drawn because there is no commerce running and there is nobody else.
Perfect setting for an apocalyptic scenario..
Isn't this what supercomputers are for? (Score:2)
Observation 2: This sounds like a money-grab more than anything else.
Observation 3: China has ghost cities already. Perhaps we could use one of theirs.
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Boeing has supercomputers but even they wouldn't produce a kite without wind tunnel tests.
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Indeed. A new universe shall be build to simulate life that simulates life that simulates life that...
Ghost Lawsuits (Score:2)
Test value? (Score:5, Insightful)
How will they actually test the viability of 'intelligent traffic systems' with no traffic?
In fact, most of those mentioned systems are about the interaction of that technology WITH PEOPLE in an urban environment. Just an empty urban environment doesn't get you much?
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I am sure you could wrangle up a sufficient number of college students looking for credit, interns and retro-post modernist-faux-psuedo-quasi hippie hipsters to move in for a few months for relatively lost cost for those experiments.
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Which reminds me of my drive to work this morning...
The human element is a huge factor in something like traffic, when you have people running red lights, right on red when it's a no-no, and lane changes with no blinker (signal for those of you not in the Boston area).
Given the circumstances of driving, and introducing the human element, I'd nominate Boston, LA, or something of the sorts.
Furthermore, I will gladly accept a government stipend to live in this town, and drive like I do to work.
As long as GLaDO
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Military training sites (Score:3)
is planning to take part in an unprecedented science project — a 20-square-mile model of a small U.S. city.
Note the military has quite a few of these, although smaller scale. Also full of bullet holes. Which might actually be a bonus if you're planning on a technology deployment in "urban" areas.
Re:Military training sites (Score:4, Funny)
>> Also full of bullet holes.
Why do you have to bring Baltimore into the discussion?
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I was amazed at the central/central eastern side of B'more when I went through on the train a couple weeks ago. Street upon street of abandoned/vacant(?) and just horribly run down row houses. Sad, indeed.
Not with my money (Score:2)
This better not get federal funding.
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There was a blog early last decade that purported to be by someone in the White House; lots of gossip about Condo Rice checking her bank account. Only thing that really stands out as credible data is that the DHS had so much cash in the budget, they couldn't spend it all on things within their remit. So they bought and stored in underground bunkers masses of expensive supplies, "Just in case".
This feels like the sort of thing a govt. dept. WOULD spend money on, as no sane private corporation would do thi
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Sorry, a technology company near D.C. just screams federal funding.
It may make money. Hell, the bridge to nowhere they built near Virginia Tech has been so profitable for auto research that they've canned the idea of actually extending it to connect the town to I-81 and using it for traffic. I'm skeptical, though, that a town without people will provide actual data on how systems interact with, well, people.
Buy out 35,000 mortgages instead? (Score:2)
$200 million will buy housing for 35 thousand? There's a town just north of Dallas called Frisco, also known as "Frisclosure" for the number of foreclosures in the area. Why not just do the testing there? Or in Las Vegas where there are thousands of homes in neighborhoods sitting empty?
Considering the state of the housing/mortgage crisis, this seems like a prime pork barrel project. I'd rather see $200 million (let's rephrase that, $0.2 billion) spent buying out mortgages or at least the pri
I can guess what they'll discover... (Score:4, Insightful)
1) solar will be recommended. NM gets a ton of sunlight and it's a friggin' desert.
2) Insulation and sealing up the shell will have the biggest impact on energy efficiency.
3) Setting the thermostat to just above/below "uncomfortable" will be the second.
4) LED lighting will be the third.
5) The capital outlay will exceed the amount of money saved for the first 4-6 years... but only because energy production is subsidized in this country.
How much experimentation do we need? This ain't rocket science. Dad was right, turn down the heat and turn off the AC. Shut off the lights when you leave the room. You think I'm made of money or something?
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20 square miles for 35k people is "Typical"? (Score:3)
I find it curious that the article says 35k people for 20 square miles is "typical". I'm familiar with several small cities with about 40k people in 9 square miles, and it's not that dense. 20 square miles for 35k people seems like a very inefficient city. 0.36 acres per person is not "city-like" at all.
Consider Detroit, which has lost a staggering amount of population, has a density of about 0.13 acres per person (using 700k and 139 square miles), and this idea of "typical" seems to be really poor.
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A "city" is a legal description of a type of civil entity. Some cities are dense urban areas (Detroit, Los Angeles). Other cities might be sparse or relatively un-populated. Taft, CA, for example ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taft,_California [wikipedia.org] ) has 9 thousand people in 15 square miles. California City has 14 thousand people in 200 square miles.
So, this project is more dense than some real cities, and less dense than most "real" cities.
Ghost Town (Score:2)
Is it something to do with the SyFy (or is that PsyPhy) channel?
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Illegal immigrants, homeless, foreclosed (Score:2)
If they think a brand new, fully working "city" is going to stay uninhabited for long, they are too stupid to be performing "science".
Once construction starts, and word gets out, all the contractors will know, which will pass word down to the friends and families of people who know the construction workers, and pretty soon, you've got illegal immigrants moving in, homeless people moving in, people who've been foreclosed on and locked out of their own houses, i.e., basically a squatter situation, and, unless
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and then... (Score:2)
... we'll nuke it!
Duplicate (Score:2)
Typical governmental waste; building something new when we already have have the same thing.
Why not just use Detroit?
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too much fighting on the dance floor...
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I think they did... (Score:2)
That was my first thought. I'm still waiting for someone to build a city like Eureka with... well... slightly lower requirements for residence. ;)
I think they did, only it's called Mountain View... ;p
-- Terry
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The requirements are all wrong, though. They don't require intelligence, only paleness.
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That was my first thought. I'm still waiting for someone to build a city like Eureka with... well... slightly lower requirements for residence. ;)
Huntsville Alabama? Last time I visited, in the early 90s, around 80% of the population was pure binary, either military uniform or doctorate degree. What do you get if you take a sleepy farm town in 1945 and drop 50 times its population of german V-2 rocket scientists, and friends, on top of it? Nobody could talk at the bar about what they did at work, but you knew whatever it was, it was cool.
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Creating decent living conditions for the poor is just plain un-American. :P
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If they did put homeless in it, hiring a bunch of instructors (not necessarily "teachers") to do training in the town would make the whole exercise more useful by making it a giant on the job retraining program. Given your suggestion involves a la
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Ever filled a tire with dirt, and then packed it down? Many times? Then built walls out of them? Me neither, looks too damn hard :)
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You can build any house anywhere you want (in residential zones, or outside of city limits to avoid zoning issues), but you have to meet certain standards that we as a society/government have set for safety-related issues. The scope of these standards was more-or-less set before anyone thought of renewable housing, and simply updated over the years, so it's quite unlikely the provisions were written simply to exclude these houses.
So without knowing more (thanks for providing a link...) I expect the reason his housing projects are blocked is because they do not conform to building codes, not because they threaten the establishment. I am a libertarian and oppose government building codes, but it's simply dishonest to portray a building-code issue as a man-keeping-us-down-for-profit issue. If that's not what's going on, maybe you should have posted a few links to solid information so I wouldn't jump to the obvious conclusions.
He's talking about Earthships. [earthship.org]
And yes it's building codes and permits that are often the problems.
However the houses built in this manner are stronger and safer than conventional housing AND they use up waste resources as well as being sustainable.
Furthermore you can really build them anywhere you can put in a well or rain catchment.
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Links? Wikipedia and search engines are your friends. Reynolds has a Wikipedia entry.
Housing is one of the easiest things to criticize. It's full of incredibly wasteful methods and customs. Much of the work is done on site, rather than at a plant. They all just have to have fireplaces. I don't know about you, but if the fireplace was a $10000 optional item, I'd nix it in a heartbeat. What I find craziest are these people who will pony up $300000 or $500000, or more, and all they get is a larger ver
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You can build any house anywhere you want (in residential zones, or outside of city limits to avoid zoning issues), but you have to meet certain standards that we as a society/government have set for safety-related issues...
What? No--aren't building codes *rules*, not standards? There's a huge difference. If they were standards, then they would adopt with times and any method capable of supporting necessary loads would be fine. Rules are more like "You must use Douglas fir for a thirty-two foot span" or "the door must be framed in such and such a manner" or "joists must be placed every X feet" or "The walls must be made of fire-resistant sheetrock at least 3/8" thick." Standards would be more "The floor material must be c
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What? No--aren't building codes *rules*, not standards? There's a huge difference. If they were standards, then they would adopt with times and any method capable of supporting necessary loads would be fine.
Some building codes are legal standards while others are just rules. You can tell the difference because the rules say "you must use this" while the standards say "you must use at least this". An example of a standard is the size of a footing for a house set on piers; IIRC in this county it must be a minimum of 16" square (I've dug 'em before, but it's been a time) and use a certain minimum amount of concrete, and you have to use so many of them per so many feet of wall and so on. An example of a rule is th
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They have both kinds.
Prescriptive: If you build it with Douglas Fir you can span 32 feet maximum. (Well, there are actually whole tables)
Standard (aka performance based): Your residence must be able to support a 90mph wind, a 0.167g lateral seismic force, 40 pounds per square foot for live load, and under this load it cannot deflect more than the span length divided by 360.
I you use the Prescriptive method, you grab an $80-100 code book (or download it from the state for free), use their tables and methods,
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Oh you'll get use out of it. You'll be quite happy when they test something new here, and it unexpectedly kills everyone in the town. That'll work out a lot better for you than if they tested it in your neighborhood.
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Finally the US are getting serious about planning and preparing for zombie outbreaks. Having ghost town ready for this purpose is clearly needed for training police, army and other first-responders for the event of a large zombie attack.
That's really not needed. We have plenty of WalMarts which could be used for practice.
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Won't work. We already have laws requiring home buyers to be informed when they buy a house next to an airport, but they buy them anyway and then promptly complain about the noise, and demand that the airport be moved. People like this are constantly tying up the legal system.
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That's a typical American town of 3,500 people in the midwest. They don't all have a Wal-Mart, but where on earth does a town of 35,000 look like that?