BELFOR Property Restoration Comes to the Rescue
The students,
faculty and staff of West Clark Community Schools in Henryville, IN, thought
the afternoon of March 2, 2012 would be like any other typical day. Little did
they know, a catastrophic F-4 tornado would soon destroy their school and most
of the community in which they lived.
It was only 20 minutes
after the students had been sent home early from class as a safety precaution
that the devastating storm hit. This forced several bus drivers and their
passengers to take emergency shelter in a church basement, homes of area
residents, or whatever other refuge they could find.
Astonishingly,
no one was injured during the horrific storm. However, three of the buses as
well as the entire school, were completely demolished by 170 mph winds, and the
destruction only took 23 seconds. What at first seemed like an irreparable
disaster would soon become a miraculous recovery at the hands of BELFOR
Property Restoration.
BELFOR Property
Restoration is the leading company in integrated disaster recovery and property
restoration services in North America. The company specializes in fixing damages
caused by fire, water, wind, and other catastrophes. No matter what time
of day or night, BELFOR is designed to respond to any property disaster or emergency.
In the case of
Henryville, IN, the BELFOR restoration experts were challenged with the
important job of restoring the community’s combined elementary, middle and high
school campus.
There were
several difficult hurdles BELFOR faced when setting to work on the restoration
project. The first included an accelerated timeline of five months, because
school administrators wanted everything to be ready by the beginning of the next
school year in August.
Securing
temporary facilities where classes could resume as soon as possible was very
important because the children needed a place to continue learning during the
restoration. The alternative would have been to allow students to fall behind
in their studies, which was not a viable option.
Negotiating
with building and restoration product manufacturers to fast-track orders and
deliver materials needed on the job site would have been a definite obstacle,
if not for BELFOR’s large buying power and persuasive project managers.
Expediting product acquisitions for the constructive restoration project was
essential to the preplanned timeline.
Increasing
manpower to ensure on-time completion while minimizing overtime costs was another
challenge of the job. The restoration team generated a structured schedule of
planning and execution to streamline processes, with a system of numerous
checks and balances.
One milestone
centered around the fact BELFOR was able to obtain a ruling from the labor
board to use both union and non-union crews on the project. Not an easy undertaking,
this enabled a more robust work calendar with an experienced team working in
carefully arranged shifts. On average, a collective workforce of 300 worked on
site day and night.
John Prater, president of Praters
Flooring, participated in the restoration. “The challenge of working on schools
that have been so damaged by tornadoes is the enormous scope of work that has
to be performed in a relatively short period of time without sacrificing
quality,” he said in an article for Disaster
Resource. “You want the community to be able to get back to some sort of
normalcy as quickly as possible.”
There were several different horrifying
images and videos playing in the news coverage following the tornado. However,
the actual video surveillance footage from the AXIS Communications Fixed Dome
Network Camera technology the school had in place was alarming, yet educational.
“Having the video footage of the actual
building being destroyed was amazing from the standpoint that we got to see in
detail what wind like this, what a weather event like this, actually does to a
structure,” said Dr. Glenn Riggs, principal of Henryville Elementary School, as
quoted by Disaster Resource.
The surveillance footage proved to be
quite a helpful reference point for BELFOR and its team. If there were questions about what fixtures
should be installed where, the teams were sometimes able to review the footage
and find their answers.
The
Striking Solutions
It only took BELFOR two weeks to prepare
a temporary facility for elementary school classes to resume. The team also found
a temporary location in three weeks for high school classes. The company worked
with school board officials, administrators, local authorities, and the
insurance adjuster to develop and implement a plan to salvage and bring up to
code a couple of old buildings.
While the workers were aggressively
trying to make these temporary facilities fit for classrooms, they were also
recovering, cleaning and delivering contents from the tornado-damaged site. The
team brought a sense of calm to what would have normally been a very stressful
situation.
Before BELFOR could begin restoring the
demolished site where the original school once stood, they had to secure its
surroundings to protect the facility from vandalism, theft, or further damage.
Thus, a security fence was built around the massive property.
Nearly 70 percent
of the 220,000-square-foot school was gutted, leading to major interior
renovations and reconstruction of essential walls and skeletal structures. In
addition, from the ground up, the remaining 30 percent had to be demolished and
rebuilt.
A few of the school’s new features
include: HVAC equipment, wiring, drywall, ceiling tiles, floor coverings,
cabinets, windows, and a roof-deck and roof. Any of the unused contents from
the temporary schools were cleaned, packed up and stored in an off-site
warehouse.
Once the hardworking team had
accomplished the nearly impossible rebuilding of the school, they engaged several
specialists, including an Industrial Hygienist, who tested for various
unsanitary elements such as mold. Remarkably, the BELFOR team and its
associates were able to accomplish the seemingly unachievable goal to have the
school up and running by the beginning of the next school year.
“One of the key things that people can
learn from this is that damage is unpredictable,” said Vernon Duty, National
Accounts Manager with BELFOR. “With a hurricane, you have three or four days’
notice, maybe more. But a tornado, which is a threat in significant portions of
the country, could happen unexpectedly,” he explained in the Disaster Resource article.
According to
Duty, the fact tornados have such unforeseen effects is something that should
prompt communities, business owners, school and hospital administrators, and
everyone to plan for the unexpected well in advance. While no one is ever fully
prepared for a natural disaster of this magnitude, creating and distributing a
framework for action prior to the need is key.
For the West
Clark community, fortunately, BELFOR was able to come to the rescue, restore
laughter and cheer to the school’s hallways, and leave the site even better
than it had been before the storm of a lifetime.
No comments:
Post a Comment