It depends on how your house was constructed and with what materials. It can range from tearing it down to just letting it dry out. Sorry I'm not more definitive, but it makes a big difference.
If you don't know it's construction, just tell me when it was built. I can guess it's construction method from that.
I understand you're looking for good news. If you can tell me more about it's construction, I can be more definitive. However, if you have insurance, it's going to depend on more on how they define the situation, not how actually fixing the problem.
Basically, either way it sucks...
My childhood house (when I was 6) went through Camille. While it survived (only ½ mile North from where Jim Cantore rode out the storm surge) I fear it's way damaged or not there now. There are railroad tracks between there and the house.. maybe every foot of elevation counted.
I think we've finally found the storm that topped Camille. Not that we were looking for it...
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Generated May 18, 2024, 3:44:08 PM EDT
When in doubt, take the word of the National Hurricane Center