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This type of underpinning is done by excavating "bays" along and under the existing foundation and filling them with mass concrete. It is sometimes called a "traditional" method to distinguish it from other types of underpinning like piling and needling. The latter often require underpinning specialists and may use proprietary underpinning systems.
A tornado inflicted roof damage to a home as soon as it formed. Moving east, an anchored mobile home was lifted and tipped over, sustaining major damage. Another home northeast of the mobile home had significant soffit and porch damage. An old TV tower was toppled on the property. Numerous pine trees were snapped along the tornado's path. [147] EF0
A brief tornado damaged several mobile homes, removing shingles and underpinning. Several sheds, carports, and a trampoline were tossed and several trees were snapped. A tornado debris signature was evident on radar. [46] EF0 SSW of Marne: Licking: OH
Tornado overturned 3 mobile homes and shifted another 7 mobile homes off of their foundations. It tore the skirting away from another mobile home, destroyed a storage shed, and snapped off or uprooted dozens of trees. A couple of trees fell on a house. A vehicle and an outbuilding were also damaged. 9 people were injured. [69] EF1 NW of Summer ...
A large house and a mobile home were moved off their foundations, a trailer was destroyed, several buildings were collapsed, and a barn and two churches were destroyed. Overall, 22 houses and 15 mobile homes were completely destroyed, 59 houses and 11 mobile homes sustained major damage, and 219 houses and 12 mobile homes experienced minor damage.
A rare anticyclonic landspout touched down, snapping and uprooting dozens of trees. Several homes sustained roof damage, and a couple of mobile homes lost their underpinning. A boat was blown across a parking lot, a few cars were shifted, and a dumpster was tossed. Some playground equipment at Coopers Steel Manufacturing was toppled. [101] EF0
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Scott County, Kentucky, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a Google map.
Homes in residential areas were also damaged, some of which lost their roofs. Past Jacksonville, the tornado reached its maximum intensity, snapping hundreds of trees and causing major damage to homes and mobile homes on Choccolocco Mountain and in Nances Creek. One home in this area was left with only one wall standing, and large hay bales ...