Mar-a-Lago: Forecasters warn Nicole will bring drenching rain to Florida. How will Trump's club fare?

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An election night party was on the event schedule Tuesday at former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club in Palm Beach.

And even as a political tempest raged across the country between Republicans and Democrats, a different sort of storm on Tuesday was churning a few hundred miles away from Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s official residence.

Forecasters on Election Day warned Tropical Storm Nicole would bring drenching rains and high winds to Florida’s East Coast — and would likely grow into at least a Category 1 hurricane — before making landfall today north of Palm Beach. If that forecast proves correct, the hurricane would muster sustained winds of between 74 mph and 95 mph and could generate a dangerous storm surge.

Ready for the storm: Mandatory evacuations announced for Palm Beach ahead of Tropical Storm Nicole

Keeping an eye out: Palm Beach monitoring Tropical Storm Nicole as it approaches Florida's east coast

Even should the storm score a direct hit on Palm Beach, Trump might take some comfort that Mar-a-Lago has weathered far stronger hurricanes since it was built in 1927 by cereal heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post and her then-husband, stockbroker E.F. Hutton.

For one thing, the house is literally rock solid: Concrete and steel anchors the structure to the coral reef below it. Many of the walls are 3 feet thick.

“This place will not move,” said the late Tony Senecal, who for years served as Trump’s butler at Mar-a-Lago, in 2005. “That's why, during a hurricane, you'll always see me here. If it goes, I'll go with it.”

Mar-a-Lago's stucco-covered walls have remained standing after every hurricane, including the massive killer storm that wreaked havoc on South Florida’s coast in 1928. The damage at Mar-a-Lago, however, was mostly confined to uprooted trees, Post later said, although there was damage to the mansion's famous Roman-style window.

In 1947, the mansion weathered another hurricane that flooded the neighborhood and points south in 1947, washing away much of the coastal road.

Today Mar-a-Lago and its 17.5 acres are protected by seawalls on the ocean and the Intracoastal Waterway.

Hurricane relief: Palm Beach United Way Hurricane Ian fund tops $1M; nets $125,000 in new matching grants

Fixing the damage: Repairs made to section of Palm Beach dock that detached during Hurricane Ian

From the archives: Building Mar-a-Lago: Marjorie Merriweather Post’s Palm Beach showplace

But the house isn't totally impervious. In September 2017, a part of the main club building sustained roof damage and minor roof leaks when the outer bands of Hurricane Irma swept Palm Beach. In addition, several trees were knocked down and landscaping was thinned along the property's south wall. Town officials at the time confirmed they had received no reports of structural damage to Mar-a-Lago or any building on the island.

Earlier, the building withstood the double whammy of back-to-back Hurricanes Frances and Jeanne in 2004.

“We lost a lot of the vegetation that gave Mar-a-Lago its character,” Trump told the Palm Beach Post after Hurricane Frances. “I wasn't there for the storm, but I've been told by my people there that it re-landscaped the place. There was a little flooding in some of the basements, too.”

In 2005 came Hurricane Wilma, which surprised locals with its strength when it barreled in from the west.

An investigation by the Associated Press in 2016 found little evidence that Wilma severely damaged Mar-a-Lago, despite Trump saying in a 2007 court deposition that he had been paid $17 million on an insurance claim after the storm.

Trump has owned the mansion since 1985. A decade later, after pouring millions of dollars into its restoration, he opened The Mar-a-Lago Club, retaining residential quarters to use for himself and family members. Trump-related entities also own three houses adjacent to the club property.

Storm preparations at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach

Today, the staff at Mar-a-Lago prepares for hurricanes in much the same way that other Palm Beach property owners do, including removing or securing outdoor furnishings and other items that could become wind-borne missiles during a storm.

Property owners also might lower the water levels in the swimming pool and place sandbags in front of outside doors, especially important in low-lying areas.

Full-house generators were rarities in Palm Beach before the storms of 2004 and 2005 but are now commonplace. Owners often give their generators a test-run in anticipation of electricity outages following a storm.

During Trump's restoration project in the 1990s, Mar-a-Lago's original windows were carefully preserved and restored, including a number of elaborately gilded ones in the main room, according to Fort Lauderdale-based architect Tamara Peacock of Peacock Architects, who worked on the project.

Unlike other historic buildings that have been restored in Palm Beach, Mar-a-Lago still uses old-fashioned metal window shutters to protect its vintage windows, including the  large one on the front of the building.

In 2016, Peacock said Mar-a-Lago was better equipped to withstand a storm than many vintage buildings.

“I've seen quite a number of historic houses during my career," she said. "It’s the most well built.”

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With strong winds buffeting palm trees and churning the Intracoastal Waterway, Mar-a-Lago is seen in this October 2106 photo taken when Palm Beach was threatened by Hurricane Matthew. The storm turned out largely to be no-show as it skirted the South Florida coast.
With strong winds buffeting palm trees and churning the Intracoastal Waterway, Mar-a-Lago is seen in this October 2106 photo taken when Palm Beach was threatened by Hurricane Matthew. The storm turned out largely to be no-show as it skirted the South Florida coast.

Darrell Hofheinz is a USA TODAY Network of Florida journalist who writes about Palm Beach real estate in his weekly “Beyond the Hedges” column. He welcomes tips about real estate news on the island. Email dhofheinz@pbdailynews.com, call (561) 820-3831 or tweet @PBDN_Hofheinz. Help support our journalism. Subscribe today.

This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Daily News: Trump's Mar-a-Lago Club has withstood many hurricanes over the years