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  2. Protect Your Home From Water Damage With These 5 Flood Barriers

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/protect-home-water-damage...

    QDFG25 Flood Gate. This barrier is an impenetrable wall with lifelong use that expands in length to stop water from seeping indoors. It works as a sealant for entryways, placed in doorways as you ...

  3. Hesco bastion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesco_bastion

    The placement of the barrier is generally very similar to the placement of a sandbag barrier or earth berm except that room must generally be allowed for the equipment used to fill the barrier. [10] The HESCO barriers are varied in sizes and models. Most of the barriers can also be stacked, and they are shipped collapsed in compact sets.

  4. This is why you should always close the interior doors in ...

    www.aol.com/news/why-always-close-interior-doors...

    Closing your interior doors can help disperse pressure throughout the home and reduce the overall force stacked up against your roof -- basically your first line of defense against Mother Nature ...

  5. Door - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Door

    Interior doors for wheelchair access must also have a minimum width of 36 in (910 mm). Residential interior doors, as well as the doors of many small stores, offices, and other light commercial buildings, are often somewhat smaller than the doors of larger commercial buildings, public buildings, and grand homes.

  6. Flood barrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flood_barrier

    The Oosterscheldekering contains 62 steel doors, each 42 metres (138 ft) wide The Maeslantkering closes the main entrance to the Port of Rotterdam, the largest port in Europe. A flood barrier , surge barrier or storm surge barrier is a specific type of floodgate , designed to prevent a storm surge or spring tide from flooding the protected area ...

  7. Metalith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metalith

    2 O flood control barrier, a system of prefabricated, interlocking aluminum barriers for flood defense, designed to hold ballast such as sand. Army Corps of Engineers tests have shown they can be assembled 20 times faster than sandbags and faster than any other tested flood control system, with relatively low seepage rates.

  8. Vapor barrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vapor_barrier

    A vapor barrier on the warm side of the envelope must be combined with a venting path on the cold side of the insulation. This is because no vapor barrier is perfect, and because water may get into the structure, typically from rain. In general, the better the vapor barrier and the drier the conditions, the less venting is required. [7]

  9. Insulating concrete form - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulating_concrete_form

    The first expanded polystyrene ICF Wall forms were developed in the late 1960s with the expiration of the original patent and the advent of modern foam plastics by BASF. [citation needed] Canadian contractor Werner Gregori filed the first patent for a foam concrete form in 1966 with a block "measuring 16 inches high by 48 inches long with a tongue-and-groove interlock, metal ties, and a waffle ...