Just curious. Why would the court even be down at this time of year?
Volleyball
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Just curious. Why would the court even be down at this time of year?
Actually, tiling help prevents floods.
Tiling would drain the field and prevent flooding of that particular field, but it all has to drain somewhere and will inevitably end up in the nearby stream. Unless there is some sort of detention system installed with the tiling I don't see how this would limit flooding downstream in the watershed. Isn't this correct? There could be factors involved that I don't know though, not intimately familiar with agricultural tiling.
True. But I'm talking about pourous pavement (where the water seeps-in and enters the groundwater table instead of being flushed instantly into a sewer or drainage ditch, which means the water slowly enters the water supply rather than quickly being flushed into a quickly rising river) AND durable green roofs. These are two separate things.
Here's a good resource for green roofs:
Greenroofs.com: The Resource Portal for Green Roofs
Green roofs have many layers of substrate. They are usually set-up with drainage systems in mind, but it often takes hours or days for the water to run out rather than instantly. I don't have time to explain about green roofs, just look up some information on your own if you're interested or head to the local bookstore and flip through some books about them. It's amazing what countries like Denmark and Germany have been doing for years, and we're very far behind.
Yeah, I just got a text that saying the same thing. Hilton's floor is in one piece...but floating.
Just saw some video courtesy of facebook. Hilton is in fact flooded.
Fact is, much of Ames is simply on a flood plain. This kind of stuff is going to happen.
I would imagine the cost of the damage to the rest of hilton would dwarf the cost of the floor. I don't know how much effort it takes to put the floor up, but it might not be the most efficient use of manpower.
I would imagine the cost of the damage to the rest of hilton would dwarf the cost of the floor. I don't know how much effort it takes to put the floor up, but it might not be the most efficient use of manpower.
Not sure how the floor is constructed now, but it used to only take a crew of 8 to 10 about 2 hours to take it down. Takes longer to put it together, obviously.
I love how Iowa State, being an amazing engineering college, can allow this type of thing to happen to Hilton like this again.
Perhaps we need to install a series of winches in the ceiling and "hoist" the floor up in an emergency?
wink: