Did you find a followup about what Home Depot actually built to replace the failed structure?
I'm thinking that the apparent success of interior structures in saving lives in nearby large span buildings probably had more to do with their interior location, away from falling tilt-up panels, than with being made of concrete block, or any other material.
I should note that wind-related changes to the building code in South Florida have not noticeably affected the rate of new construction, and a lot of new construction is tilt-ups.
As for wind-resistant construction, I wonder how big an increment in construction cost would accrue if the code required the walls to stand in the absence of a roof?
Or if the code just required resistance to say 150 mph winds, or 200 mph winds, or X00 mph winds, how many fewer people would die in tornadoes, and how much would building costs increase? That seems like a logical problem to pose to an engineering/ actuarial/ econometric team, say at a university, instead of just declaring that tornado resistant buildings are too expensive or technically impossible to achieve. There must be enough historical data available to construct at least a crude parametric model.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA