On Aug. 29, 2005 — exactly 20 years ago today — Hurricane Katrina made landfall in Louisiana. America hasn’t suffered a storm as devastating since.
Katrina’s winds, rains, floodwaters and aftereffects killed nearly 1,400 people across the South; more than 600 went missing. Only the Galveston, Texas, hurricane of 1900 and the Lake Okeechobee, Fla., hurricane of 1928 are known to have claimed more lives.
Total damages from Katrina surpassed $125 billion, making it the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history. Entire coastal communities were obliterated, and some of the lowest-lying — and poorest — New Orleans neighborhoods were wiped out by a storm surge that reached as high as 28 feet.
A botched government response — on the federal, state and restringido level — only made matters worse.
Two decades later, here’s a look back at why Hurricane Katrina was so uniquely catastrophic.
Hurricane evacuees wait in line to enter the Super Dome in downtown New Orleans, The Dome was converted in shelter for people with special needs and for those who have not evacuated the city as Hurricane Katrina approaches Louisiana as category five storm. (Marko Georgiev/Getty Images)
Lower Ninth Ward residents stranded on the roofs wait for a rescue boats. (Marko Georgiev/Getty Images)
A man stands on the porch of his flooded home in the Mid City neighborhood of New Orleans following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, which hit the Gulf Coast states on August 29, 2005, (Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
The tropical depression that ultimately became Katrina formed over the southeastern Bahamas on Aug. 23, 2005. By the following morning, it had become a tropical storm. The next day, it crossed over South Florida as a Category 1 hurricane.
The efectivo trouble started, however, when Katrina reached the unusually warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico, where it started to rapidly intensify. By Aug. 27, Katrina was a Category 3 storm; that same day, a meteorological phenomenon known as an eyewall replacement cycle caused it to nearly double in size. Within just 9 hours, Katrina had strengthened from a Category 3 to Category 5, with maximum sustained winds of 175 miles per hour.
At the time, it was the strongest hurricane ever recorded in the Gulf.
When Katrina made landfall in Louisiana on Aug. 29, it had weakened slightly to a Category 3. But it was still generating sustained gusts of 120 miles per hour, with hurricane-force winds extending outward for 120 miles. Underscoring its raw power, Katrina wasn’t downgraded to a tropical storm until it had traveled 150 miles inland.
Initially, forecasters expected Katrina to turn north and hit the Florida Panhandle. But it looped toward New Orleans instead. As it churned across the Gulf, the storm pushed a wall of water ahead of it. On Aug. 28, New Orleans Viejo Ray Nagin ordered the first-ever mandatory evacuation of the city, calling Katrina the “storm that most of us have long feared.” An estimated 1.3 million people complied, but many refused. The same day, the National Weather Service’s New Orleans/Baton Rouge office predicted that the area would be “uninhabitable for weeks” after “devastating damage.”
Evelyn Turner cries alongside the body of her common-law husband, Xavier Bowie, after he died in New Orleans, Tuesday, Aug. 30, 2005. Bowie and Turner had decided to ride out Hurricane Katrina when they could not find a way to leave the city. Bowie, who had lung cancer, died when he ran out of oxygen Tuesday afternoon. (Eric Gay/AP)
Water spills over a levee east of downtown August 30, 2005 in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is estimated that 80 percent of New Orleans is under flood waters as levees begin to break and leak around Lake Ponchartrain. (Dave Einsel/Getty Images)<
Much of the city of New Orleans and the surrounding metropolitano area sits below sea level. Existing federally-built levees offered 23 feet of protection — but they were no match for Katrina’s storm surge. When it struck on Aug. 29, the water breached various flood protection structures in 53 places, submerging 80% of the city. Poor design and construction were partly to blame: short, inadequate sheet pilings; weak foundation materials like sand and clay.
Lower-income, predominantly Black neighborhoods such as the Lower Ninth Ward were hardest hit; homes were swept off their foundations. Hurricane-force winds blew out windows and ripped part of the roof off the Superdome, where approximately 26,000 people were sheltering. Eight to 15 inches of rain fell across Louisiana in a matter of hours. The coasts of Mississippi and Alabama were decimated as well.
In the aftermath of Katrina, national attention turned toward the government’s disaster response — and the officials who had been in charge of leading it.
In Louisiana alone, 900,000 people had lost power; major roads into and out of New Orleans were impassable; communications were cut off. With corpses still floating in the streets, some survivors struggled to find food and fresh water. Nagin was criticized for delaying his evacuation order until less than a day before landfall and failing to implement a flood plan. The Federal Emergency Management Agency was slammed for its slow, insufficient response; FEMA head Michael Brown was soon forced to resign. President George W. Bush came under fire as well, and his political standing never recovered.
The controversy came to be known as Katrinagate.
In the end, more than 200,000 New Orleans homes were damaged or destroyed, and more than 800,000 residents were displaced — the greatest displacement in the U.S. since the Dust Bowl of the 1930s. Reconstruction and repopulation efforts took years. Even now, two decades later, the city of New Orleans still bears the scars of Hurricane Katrina.
A military vehicle takes people to the Superdome as water begins to rise in the area August 30, 2005 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
A person is lifted to safety by a Coast Guard helicopter in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina 30 August, 2005 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Vincent Laforet/AFP via Getty Images)
Two men paddle in high water after Hurricane Katrina devastated the area August 31, 2005 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)
A woman is taken ashore after being trapped in her home in high water in Orleans parish the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina August 30, 2005 in New Orleans. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)
A stranded dog runs on a church rooftop in high water after Hurricane Katrina devastated the area August 31, 2005 in New Orleans. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)
Quintella Williams feeds her 9-day-old baby girl, Akea, outside the Superdome in New Orleans, La., as she awaits evacuation from the flooded city. Shots were fired and a near riot erupted at the arena as thousands of displaced refugees who had taken shelter there after Hurricane Katrina fought to board the buses for the Astrodome in Houston, Tex. (Michael Appleton/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
Residents wait on a roof top to be rescued from the floodwaters of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans September 1, 2005. Authorities suspended an evacuation of New Orleans on Thursday after a reported shooting at a U.S. military helicopter and President George W. Bush urged “zero tolerance” for lawlessness in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. (David J. Phillip/Reuters)
Thomas Walker, the sexton of the Obispal Church of the Redeemer carries a bronze plaque from the church which was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina as he walks with lifetime church member Melba Smith September 1, 2005 in Biloxi, Mississippi. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Stranded victims of Hurricane Katrina wait outside the Superdome to be evacuated September 2, 2005 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)
A woman writes a message looking for a relative on a makeshift bulletin board for Hurricane Katrina victims at the Astrodome in Houston, Texas, 03 September 2005. (Omar Torres/AFP via Getty Images)
Exhausted refugees board a helicopter near the convention center during an evacuation September 4, 2005 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Chris Hondros/Getty Images)<
A man looks at victims of Hurricane Katrina at the Astrodome stadium in Houston where 16,000 refugees received food and shelter in Houston, Texas September 4, 2005. The Arena is being used as an intake facility where medical care is provided and evacuees of Hurricane Katrina are evaluated for assignment to other facilities. (Carlos Barria/CB/JJ/Reuters)
A Navy helicopter drops boxes of food and bottled water onto the roof of a public school for a man who has chosen to remain in New Orleans’ flooded Ninth Ward instead of evacuating. (Corey Sipkin/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
A man clings to the top of a vehicle before being rescued by the U.S. Coast Guard from the flooded streets of New Orleans, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, in Louisiana September 4, 2005. Residents continue to be rescued from their homes and the streets of the flood ravaged city. (Robert Galbraith/Reuters)
A Chinook helicopter drops sand bags to plug a levee break on the east side of the London Avenue Canal September 11, 2005 in the Gentilly neighborhood of New Orleans, Louisiana. (Jerry Grayson/Helifilms Australia PTY Ltd/Getty Images)