darwink
Senior Member
My strata is working with our insurance company to install automatic shutoffs in every unit along with accompanying sensors after 4 water events in a year.That's my understanding. Getting beneath the frost-line is the key part which means 4 or 5 feet down at least. You're pretty close to a complete basement just by hooking in the utilities. That said, there's probably a bunch of different ways to achieve the minimum, without necessarily building a full, occupiable basement.
Specifically, the article is actually speaking of only removing basements in floodplains or other "flood prone" areas. This is much more targeted and a reasonable thing to explore, or at least find ways to take the expensive parts that water can easily damage out of harms way. Collectively, if all basements were removed or somehow hardened to not need remediation or at risk of mold from flooding, the collective insurance saving must be absolutely huge.
Relatedly, I have always been surprised there's not more (successful) efforts in design and construction to reduce the risk/impact of water damage. Even relatively minor leaks can cost huge amounts of damage. I know a friend with an upstairs washing machine, a minor hose leak resulted in huge damage to replace the main floor ceiling and clean everything up. And we've all heard the stories of a $100 fixture bathroom faucet leak in an apartment building that damages multiple floors beneath it at the cost of tens of thousands of dollars.
Perhaps it's just a tough problem to solve, but seems like we should be trying harder to actually water and leak proof our buildings give how devastating the impacts are?




