Industry News
 
Steel Defies Bushfires' Double Jeopardy
16th January 2003  
 

Standing amidst tree trunks still blackened from the 2001 bushfires, Eric Batten, pictured with his dog, Breeze, credits fire resistant materials including steel building frames and roofing, gutters and fascias made from COLORBOND® steel with twice saving his Kurrajong home from bushfires.

Bushfires swept through Eric and Kerrie Batten's property at Blaxton Ridge near Kurrajong in 1990 and 2001, destroying outdoor furniture and reducing the surrounding area to a blackened desert. However, their steel roofed buildings were spared on both occasions.

Eric Batten, an active member of the Rural Fire Service, attributes the fire resistance of his family home to the use of COLORBOND® steel for the roof, gutters and fascias, and the structural house frames made from ZINCALUME® steel.

Kurrajong was one of the worst hit areas in the 2001 bushfires in New South Wales, which destroyed more than a dozen homes, isolated towns, and blanketed the state in a brown haze.

The first fire to strike the Batten property arrived two days before Christmas in 1990.

"Our gutters were fairly clear because I had cleaned them about two weeks beforehand. However we weren't here when the bushfire struck and a couple of fires started in the gutters on the garage," Mr Batten said.

"There is visible scorching of the gutters in a couple of spots, but being a full Nu-Steel building the fire had no eaves to burn into and nowhere to go.

"If the fascias had been made from more traditional materials, the fire would have taken off into the roof."

Eric Batten's wife Kerrie said she learned later that the Bushfire Brigade had expected the house not to survive when they travelled past the property to fight the main fire.

"The 1990 fire was much hotter than 2001, with about 65 knot winds. The garage survived on its own, but everything else was just like a black desert," she said.

On Christmas Day 2001 Eric Batten was away fighting the fires, while Kerrie Batten was at home with her two children and their dogs preparing the property, but hoping the fire would pass them by.

"The family stayed inside the house because it is often safer to stay inside than evacuate," Mr Batten said.

"The fire passed right through the property and again the house survived mostly intact, but we lost everything around it - all the gardens, the pool equipment and pool shed, our irrigation equipment and all our fencing.

"There were no real fire issues with the house other than some leaves caught in a solar panel on the roof which burnt all the colour off the roof back to the bare metal, but went no further than that," Mr Batten said.

"In terms of fire resistance I'm very confident about having house framing made from ZINCALUME® steel and also steel roof, gutters and fascias, which are all a barrier to fire.

"If you build something from steel it's unlikely to burn - and if you can stop things from getting too hot, it's not going to bend or twist either."

For Further Information Contact:
Ralph Warren
Nu-Steel Homes
19-23 Loftus Street
Riverstone NSW 2765
email: nusteel@hawknet.com.au
Ph: 02 9627 2322
Fax: 02 9627 5727

 
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