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Hurricanes get the headlines, but a Florida home faces a whole list of threats year-round: flooding, fire, mold, and termites. One of the strongest arguments for a SCIP (Structural Concrete Insulated Panel) home is how well it handles all four. Here is the rundown.
When water gets into a wood-framed home, the damage keeps going long after the water leaves — framing warps, drywall crumbles, and mold sets in. A SCIP shell is concrete and EPS foam, neither of which rots or absorbs water structurally. After a flood, a concrete shell can typically be cleaned and dried rather than gutted. (Proper foundation elevation for your flood zone still matters — ask us about your site.)
Concrete does not burn. The structural concrete skin of a SCIP wall gives the home strong fire resistance compared with combustible wood framing — valuable both for safety and, often, for insurance. Learn more about the system on our construction technology page.
Mold needs moisture and an organic food source. Florida supplies the humidity; wood-based construction supplies the food. A concrete-and-foam SCIP shell removes the structural food source, making it far harder for mold to take hold in the building envelope. That is a real health and durability advantage in our climate.
Florida is one of the most termite-prone states in the country, and termites devour wood-framed homes. There is nothing in a SCIP wall’s concrete-and-EPS structure for termites to eat. You still protect wood trim, cabinetry, and any framed elements, but the core structure is not on the menu.
The common thread is simple: by replacing structural wood with concrete and stable foam, a SCIP home removes the vulnerabilities that flooding, fire, mold, and termites exploit. Combine that with its hurricane resistance, and you have a structure built specifically for everything Florida throws at a house.
The concrete-and-foam structure does not rot or absorb water structurally, so a SCIP shell can often be cleaned and dried after a flood rather than gutted. Proper foundation elevation for your flood zone is still important.
Far less than wood-framed homes. Mold needs an organic food source and termites eat wood — neither is present in a SCIP wall’s concrete-and-EPS structure, so the core envelope resists both.
They are highly fire-resistant. The structural concrete skin does not burn, giving a SCIP home strong fire performance compared with combustible wood framing.
Build a home that handles Florida — all of it. Get a free quote or read our pros and cons guide.
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Updated:
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