My Hurricane-Proof House Survived. Then the HOA Tried to Ruin Me.-Ginny

When I built my house outside Bay Ridge Shores, I knew people were going to talk.

They talked about the concrete walls first.

Then the windows.

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Then the roofline.

Then the way the whole place sat low and stubborn against the Gulf wind, like it expected trouble and had already decided not to apologize for surviving it.

Samantha Stewart hated it from the beginning.

She was president of the Bay Ridge Shores Homeowners Association, which meant she believed her opinion had the force of weather, law, and scripture combined.

She once stood near my gate in a cream blazer and told me my bunker-style exterior created a “hostile visual tone” for the community.

I told her hurricanes did not care about visual tone.

That was the first time I saw her smile go thin.

I did not build that house for applause.

I built it because I had spent 30 years flying planes over the Gulf and watching storms form where blue sky had been an hour earlier.

I knew what pressure systems could do.

I knew what wind sounded like when it stopped being air and started being a weapon.

So I overbuilt.

Concrete walls.

Steel connections.

Impact-rated glass.

Drainage trenches.

Roof fasteners that cost more than some people’s vacations.

Neighbors joked that I was building for the end of the world.

I told them I was only building for Thursday.

Bay Ridge Shores was a pretty place before Hurricane Helena.

Too pretty, maybe.

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