Every hurricane season brings the same debate: are Florida’s building codes too strict, too expensive, and stifling development? As a structural engineer who has inspected post-hurricane damage across the Gulf Coast, I have a clear answer — our codes aren’t strict enough in some areas, and enforcement remains inconsistent.
The Florida Building Code, especially the High Velocity Hurricane Zone requirements in Miami-Dade and Broward, represents the gold standard nationally. Buildings constructed to these standards consistently perform better during storms. The evidence from Hurricane Ian in 2022 was overwhelming: newer code-compliant structures in Fort Myers suffered dramatically less damage than older buildings just blocks away.
Yet developers continue to push for code relaxations, arguing that stricter standards add 7-12% to construction costs. What they don’t mention is the insurance savings, reduced repair costs, and — most importantly — the lives protected when the next Category 4 storm makes landfall.
Florida should be exporting its building code expertise to the rest of the Southeast, not weakening it for short-term savings.
By Dr. Sarah Patel, P.E., Florida Structural Engineers Association