OMNICRETE DEVELOPMENT, INC.
THE GREENEST, MOST SUSTAINABLE, STRONGEST AND
         ECONOMICAL CONSTRUCTION SYSTEM EVER DEVELOPED . . .
GREENSBURG TORNADO

IS OMNICRETE TRI-WALL SYSTEM AN OVERKILL?

Some people have stated that the OMNICRETE wall design is an “OVER KILL” on its strength. However, after viewing the attached photos, one would quickly get the distinced impression that the strength of the OMNICRETE wall is anything but an "overkill"; especially after studying what has happened on May 4th 2007 in Greensburg, KS.

Mother nature keeps on getting worse and worse while the OMNICRETE'S costs are getting lower than ever before and the technique of assembly keeps getting better and better and mother nature keeps lending her hand.

NO building system can compare in quality or cost!

Best Regards to All,

Len Terry



The FORCE!




The AFTERMATH!

Survivors picked over the remnants of their homes and possessions, still dazed by the twister's strength and scope. The town was a nightmare of splintered homes and smashed vehicles, the air redolent with the smell of sap from trees stripped of bark. "We want everybody to know, and I plead to the American people as well as the people here in Kansas, this is a huge catastrophe that has happened to our small town,'' Hewitt said. "All my downtown is gone. My home is gone. My staff's homes are gone. And we've got to find a way to get this to work and come to work every day and get this thing back on its feet. It's going to be tough.'' Among the funnel clouds on Saturday were a series of kilometre wide "wedge'' tornadoes - similar to the one that devastated Greensburg, meteorologist Mike Umscheid said. Umscheid said the slow-moving storm system would likely spawn severe weather early into Sunday morning. "It looks like it's going to be another long night,'' he said. A twister also hit a high school in Sweetwater, Oklahoma, on Saturday, and storm spotters reported damage to nearby residences in the far western Oklahoma town. There were injuries, though the number and severity were not clear because communications had been knocked out, a spokeswoman for the Oklahoma Highway Patrol said. Several tornadoes were reported in that area and several other parts of the state. Weather Service meteorologist Larry Ruthi said the path of damage in Greensburg was 2.3 kilometres wide, estimating it would be classified a "upper F-4 or an F-5'' tornado, the strongest possible. Jose Peraza said he was driving his oil rig into town when he heard the siren and driving hail started pounding the area. He pulled over and hid with several other people in a convenience store freezer. He said the storm ripped the side off the freezer, and when he came out he found the twister had thrown his truck - weighed down by 18,000 kilograms of oil - "like nothing''. The dead included eight in Kiowa County and one in nearby Pratt County, said Sharon Watson, a spokeswoman for the Kansas Adjutant General's Department. She said officials are looking into reports of two other storm-related deaths. AP

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