The very strongest can destroy cement buildings.
An EF4 tornado can completely level well-constructed houses and blow away houses of average or below average construction. They can strip bark from trees, lift large objects, and even peel pavement from roads.
of houses
Coat it with a nice layer of lubricant. Then cement, always cement.
Tornadoes can destroy as much houses as it can depending on the length of their path. Most tornadoes are too weak to destroy houses, causing mostly superficial damage. However, in the works cases a tornado can destroy thousands of houses.
Wood and cement.
Bricks and cement
Cement
awan lang
The houses were of different kinds of metals and cement where the houses were easy to breakdown
An EF-3 tornado can cause significant damage to a house, including tearing off roof materials and exterior walls. However, the complete destruction of a house would typically require a higher intensity tornado, such as an EF-4 or EF-5.
In a weak tornado windows may break, creating the hazard of broken glass. Trees can fall into houses. In a stronger tornado the roof may be torn off, exposing the inside of the house and possibly causing walls to collapse. Weaker houses may collapse or shift off their foundations. A violent tornado can level most homes and in some cases completely blow them away. As intensity increases, the potential for flying debris does as well.
No, houses are more likely to be damaged by the strong winds and flying debris associated with a tornado rather than from the low air pressure. Most houses are not airtight enough for the pressure differences caused by a tornado to make them explode.