Homebuilder unveils fire-resilient neighborhood to limit devastation from wildfires

KB Home on Thursday unveiled its first wildfire-resilient neighborhood in Southern California, marking one of the many solutions the homebuilding industry is working on to protect structures and communities from the devastating effects of natural disasters.KB Home, one of the largest homebuilders in the U.S., announced that KB Home’s Dixon Trail community in Escondido is the first in the nation that meets the home- and neighborhood-level wildfire resilience standards developed by the independent nonprofit research organization Insurance Institute for Business & Home Safety.The community was built with fire-resistant materials and is “designed to IBHS’s highest level of protection against direct flame contact, radiant heat and embers, which helps to meaningfully reduce the likelihood of wildfire spread,” the company said.KB Home said it implemented strategies both in and around the homes to prevent wildfires “from becoming catastrophic.”For instance, the company has installed Class A fire-rated roofs, noncombustible gutters, upgraded windows and doors, and ember- and flame-resistant vents for homes.It also created a 5-foot noncombustible buffer around structures. KB Home also separated nearly all the structures by more than 10 feet and decreased the potential fuels through the use of fire-resistant materials like all-metal fence systems.The community was built after a JPMorgan analysis revealed that overall economic losses and insured losses caused by the deadly wildfires impacting Southern California are likely to be the most costly in state history.JPMorgan’s insurance analysts released a report in January that looked at the exposure of homeowner and commercial property insurance lines in light of the wildfires that have devastated communities in the Los Angeles area, including Pacific Palisades and Altadena.
Several people were killed and thousands of homes, businesses and other structures were damaged or destroyed.The analysts estimated that t...