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Tile Innovation Can Help Save Lives
Tile Innovation Can Help Save Lives

Forbes

time31-05-2025

  • Business
  • Forbes

Tile Innovation Can Help Save Lives

Innovative tile floor is smooth underfoot when dry, rough and slip resistant when wet Ceramic tile is one of the world's oldest and most commonly used building products. It can form a basic floor or a magnificent wall mosaic. It can clad cabinets, countertops, pool edges, patios and even exterior walls. For a material with thousands of years of history, it's remarkably modern and innovative. One of the most notable innovations in recent years is tile's ability to turn a smooth surface into a rough one when it's exposed to water. This is both a delight to bare feet and a new opportunity for safer, more slip resistant bathroom and exterior flooring. The capability is connected to a digital glazing process called 'All Over or 'In/Out' that turns baked clay slabs into finished tiles. What creates the slip resistance is a micronized silicate that is incorporated into the glaze, explains technical consultant to the Tile of Spain industry group Ryan Fasan. 'What it does is increase the surface tension of water on the tile's surface to essentially create a suction effect that increases effective coefficient of friction when the surface is wet.' Coefficient of friction (often abbreviated as COF on specification sheets) is how tiles are rated for slip resistance, with standards varying across national borders. One of the companies offering this smooth to slip-resistant finish transition technology in the U.S. is Tau Ceramica, based in the Castellon region of Spain. Its Mythe series is specifically designed for outdoor or wet areas, and was showcased at the latest Cevisama, Cersaie and Coverings tile expos, but it's also offering it other lines. If you're selecting Mythe for a project where anti-slip performance is critical, it is important to choose the appropriate finish, the brand cautions. That's a key point beyond this one brand, as some manufacturers are offering comparable glazing technology, but not qualifying it as slip resistant. Be sure to ask your design, construction or retail professional for their expertise in selecting the right material for your home. Fasan estimates that 25% of Spanish brands are offering this glazing technique and sees it growing in popularity and availability in coming years. 'Between home sizes shrinking and multi-family projects being a major factor in addressing the global housing affordability crisis – integration of outdoor space as living space will only increase in importance,' he predicts. 'As ceramic products are one of the few products that can seamlessly transition from inside to out, I don't believe this style of glaze is going anywhere but up in importance to consumers,' he adds. (It's worth noting that Spain is the second largest tile exporter to the U.S., according to the Tile Council of North America, making the selection for this product category fairly large and likely growing larger.) In regions where wildfire risk is high and high risk regions are increasing in size, this product also has the benefit of being noncombustible, offering both the potential for reduced fire risk and insurance discounts through programs like Wildfire Prepared Home. Then there's the life-saving fall risk reduction. According to the Centers for Disease Control, close to 80% of falls at home occur in the bathroom, and more than 200,000 older adults are treated in emergency rooms for bathroom-related injuries. (Not all are floor-related, of course, but reducing one cause can only help reduce fall counts!) 'For older adults, falls and associated injuries threaten their health, independence and quality of life. More than a third of people aged 65 and older living independently fall each year and falls are the leading cause of injury-related deaths and hospital emergency department visits,' according to an article in Injury Epidemiology. There are many ways to reduce the risk of falls in the home. This innovation offers one more potential option. ***Author's Note: Fasan and Tau statements were quoted from email interviews.

How Baltimore's Key Bridge collapse unfolded and where investigations stand 1 year later
How Baltimore's Key Bridge collapse unfolded and where investigations stand 1 year later

CBS News

time26-03-2025

  • General
  • CBS News

How Baltimore's Key Bridge collapse unfolded and where investigations stand 1 year later

For 47 years, the Francis Scott Key Bridge stood as the gateway to the Port of Baltimore and a landmark as one of the longest steel truss bridges in the world. It collapsed in seconds just before 1:30 a.m. on March 26, 2024. The Dali, a cargo ship bound for Sri Lanka, lost power and crashed into one of the main support piers, sending members of a construction crew filling potholes on the bridge into the frigid Patapsco River . The victims are 35-year-old Alejandro Hernandez Fuentes, 26-year-old Dorlian Ronial Castillo Cabrera, 38-year-old Maynor Yasir Suazo-Sandoval, 24-year-old Carlos Hernandez, Miguel Angel Luna Gonzalez, 49, and Jose Mynor Lopez, 35. Maria del Carmen Castellon called Luna Gonzalez "the best husband" and her "best friend." The two immigrants from El Salvador met in the U.S. and married in 2017 after spending more than a decade together. Castellon said she still vividly remembers the last conversation she had with her husband in the hours before he left for his overnight shift on the Francis Scott Key Bridge on March 26. "That Monday, my husband calls me and says, 'Mami, can you make me a tortilla?" Castellon recounted. "He said goodbye with a kiss," Castellon added. "And when he said goodbye, all I remember is that he took his phone and he put it in the car, and I saw his wallpaper was a photo of us. It was the last time I saw him." For Castellon, justice is a difficult concept: "Justice for me would be to have my husband at my side. Share all the dreams we had planned." She implored people "not to forget" her husband and the other victims of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse. "They were there," she noted, "so this country can have better streets. And those bridges, to have better conditions." "The only thing I would love for people to know is that, for me, my husband is a hero, alongside his five coworkers," Castellon said in an interview with CBS News in September 2024. Only one worker survived. Julio Cervantes Suarez clung to a piece of steel in the water after escaping his work truck, an escape possible because the truck had manual windows. "He survived because his window was manual. He was able to roll down the window and escape. You can imagine how frightening that is," his lawyer, L. Chris Stewart, said at a news conference last year. Body camera video shows Cervantes Suarez walking to safety after his rescue. In the light of day one year ago, it was hard to comprehend what happened. "The video and the pictures that you saw really didn't do it justice. You really had to physically see it. You were just in awe of it. It didn't look real, but it was real," said Brian Retz with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. "It was part of the skyline. You came in and you didn't see it anymore—and it was shocking." But crews wasted no time and developed a plan to map out and remove thousands of tons of debris and carefully retrieve the bodies of the victims. It was a dangerous job in the murky water. "It was a huge task, removing all that debris and getting the channel back open," Retz said. Unified Command, made up of multiple state and federal agencies, prioritized opening the channel and clearing the steel and asphalt piece by piece to get the Port of Baltimore open again. For weeks, the Dali sat in the Patapsco, the lanes of the bridge draped across it . The crew was forced to stay onboard . It would be two months before controlled explosions removed the largest pieces of the bridge from the ship . And yet another month would pass before the Dali left Baltimore . Some of Dali's crew members remain in Baltimore in legal limbo. The group Apostleship of the Sea has helped the crew in Maryland who do not know when they will return home. "The monotony of just sitting can wear on you, so that's why we're kind of trying to do baseball games and trips here and there just to keep them from becoming bored and then starting to ruminate on the incident and have that affect their mental health," said Andrew Middleton, from Apostleship of the Sea. Lawsuits are on a slow march through the court system . The federal government claimed the tragedy was avoidable and blamed cheap, quick fixes to the ship's electrical system . The National Transportation Safety Board continues its investigation into what went wrong. The NTSB said its final report would be issued in the fall. Last week, the agency released a report blaming Maryland officials for failing to conduct a recommended assessment that would have shown the bridge was vulnerable to a strike . The state helped develop the assessment protocols in 1991. "Frankly, we've been sounding the alarm on this since the tragedy occurred," NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy said at a news conference. Federal investigators found the chances of a vessel striking the Key Bridge were 30 times the recommended threshold and said the Chesapeake Bay Bridge is also at risk along with 67 other bridges across the United States . "We asked had you done this vulnerability assessment on the Key Bridge. The answer was no. We then asked, 'Are you doing this vulnerability assessment on the Chesapeake Bay Bridge?' The answer is no," Homendy said. Governor Wes Moore pushed back in an interview with WJZ this week. "There is not a bridge in this country that could have taken that kind of impact," Moore said. "We are going to make sure we are cooperating with the NTSB to get all the assessments done, but also, I'm going to make sure that those reckless operators are held to account for the tragedy that happened to our state." In 2028, a new bridge will rise over the Patapsco River , but memories of Baltimore's landmark have not faded along with the pain of the families who lost their loved ones that fateful day . "You want to see the new bridge come up, and you want to see things get back to normal even though it really won't in certain ways, especially for those who have lost loved ones," Retz said. "And it will change the landscape of Baltimore forever."

South Union Ave double murder trial postponed to April
South Union Ave double murder trial postponed to April

Yahoo

time18-02-2025

  • Yahoo

South Union Ave double murder trial postponed to April

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — The trial of a man charged with two counts of murder in a shooting on South Union Avenue has been postponed to April. Brian Castellon, 31, faces a total of 15 felony counts in the shooting deaths of two people at a mobile home community on April 12, 2023. Ernest Dean Vega, 27, and Jordan Shelton, 29, were killed in the 1200 block of South Union Avenue. On Friday, Castellon's trial date was moved to April 1. Castellon, a member of the Mexican Mafia, was released from prison a week before the shooting, according to court documents. He admitted to the shooting, the reports say, and to attempting to carjack someone and afterward breaking into a home where he threatened to kill the residents if they didn't give him keys to a vehicle. He admitted firing at the residents when they tried to leave, the reports say. Deputies arrested him soon after he shot at the residents, according to the documents. A handgun with no serial number was found on him. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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