- Saffir, Herbert Seymour
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▪ 2008American structural engineerborn March 29, 1917, New York, N.Y.died Nov. 21, 2007, Miami, Fla.was an expert on hurricane damage to buildings, and about 1969 he began to devise a five-category scale for ranking hurricanes to clarify the destructive potential of their winds. Robert H. Simpson, then director of the U.S. National Hurricane Center, added storm surge (flooding) information for each category, and the Saffir-Simpson hurricane scale, as it became known, quickly proved to be a valuable tool for describing storm intensity. Saffir received a civil-engineering degree (1940) from the Georgia Institute of Technology. In 1959 he established his own structural-engineering firm in Coral Gables, Fla., where he worked until shortly before his death. During many surveys of hurricane damage, he learned how structures failed in hurricane winds, and he helped write and advocate building codes for storm-resistant construction in hurricane-prone areas. He also designed about 50 bridges.
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Universalium. 2010.