@lucifargundam @fluffy @Archivist @LouisIngenthron
Forgive me for not trusting american resources written by people directly benefiting from drywall's need for replacing, but last time I checked brick walls didn't require nearly as much building/repairing since they generally stay where they're built, being solid and all.
@lucifargundam @fluffy @Archivist @LouisIngenthron that's true, in regions where disasters of that scale happen and everything will get wrecked anyway you might as well build from the cheaper material. But that's not the entire US. Also when it comes to tornadoes and hurricanes, all but the biggest usually rip the roof off and leave the rest of the brick building mostly intact, unlike with cardboard homes which just entirely become a part of the weather.
@Amikke @lucifargundam @fluffy @Archivist Honestly, that material is almost never used for exterior walls in America. You try to punch an exterior wall, your hand will be broken. We only use the cheap stuff on the inside.
@LouisIngenthron @lucifargundam @fluffy @Archivist every time a major tornado happens I see a lot of footage with entire neighbourhoods of american homes disintegrating completely, with no brick walls in sight. Similarly with footage of out of control cars flying through multiple walls like they were nothing.
@Amikke @lucifargundam @fluffy @Archivist Right, but usually those are mobile homes, which of course are built to shitty standards.
@LouisIngenthron @lucifargundam @fluffy @Archivist oh, makes sense, I forgot these are pretty popular there.
@Amikke @LouisIngenthron @fluffy @Archivist
Mobile homes are a fraction of the cost of conventional homes. They're not meant to last through generations of living in-place, but most of the time are done so anyway.
@lucifargundam @Amikke @fluffy @Archivist That's what happens in a country with unaffordable housing and no public option. 🤷♂️
@lucifargundam @LouisIngenthron @Amikke @fluffy @Archivist Everything to avoid building panel blocks/commieblocks, even when it'd be safer, cheaper and more practical, lol.
@Amikke @lucifargundam @fluffy @Archivist We use brick all the time for exterior walls; just not so much for interior. The benefit there is that it's much easier to add insulation between the layers, easier to run plumbing/electric behind drywall, and it's easier to drive nails in for hanging things.
My house, in hurricane country, is made primarily of cinder block exterior with wood-framed gypsum board interior.
@Amikke @fluffy @Archivist @LouisIngenthron
Seasonal earthquakes, floods and tornadoes don't care if it's made out of brick or drywall.
Cheaper to transport and rebuild with drywall from across the country than tons of brick.