Info from the bid questions submitted for the UK Grain & Forage Center:
"Section 075323 part 2.2.
The spec calls for 180mph wind speed rating. Is this what is required? Can this be reduced? This wind speed is very expensive to achieve."
Architect: "System must be designed to comply with the ultimate wind speed of 115 as noted on structural drawings."
The 180mph above refers to the roof's wind speed rating. The ultimate wind speed of 115mph would be associated with a Cat II in Kentucky. 180mph was the specified roof rating.
Additional bid documents I found (posted others previously):
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://www.bidnet.com/bneattachments?/487325666.pdf&ved=2ahUKEwjM3aKDyuT0AhWsRTABHS9_ASAQFnoECBEQAQ&usg=AOvVaw2SOgtQjyT4U6bp_7jEKWUG
Includes full mechanical, electrical, and plumbing equipment schedules along with structure drawings and other usual building specs.
I'm not sure if the Grain & Forage Center will qualify for Institutional Building as per the Enhanced Fujita scale due to its roof material/construction, size of windows, and other structural reasons.
That said, I also believe it is a definite cut above your typical junior/senior high so I think a blend of 16/20 DIs would be reasonable. For those reasons, I expect a 170 - 190mph wind speed equating to EF4 for this particular structure. That's without looking at all the pictures in-depth, surrounding context, etc.
It's a well-built building. I believe the damage lower bound is 160mph at worst, but when considering the quality of construction, the roof rating, etc I think 170mph is a more realistic lower bound. I would be shocked if they went over 190mph unless there's other nearby structures or phenomenon (and there may be because I've only looked at the building itself) simply because of how the ratings process is handled in 2021. My best guess is they'll go with something like 175mph to 180mph.
That's what I would call a fairly rational analysis.
There's about as extensive documentation as you can get for this building. They have the structural drawings, schedules, and full information on every single structural component (manufacturer/model) along with the architect/DE's specs and ratings.
It should be quite easy to determine a fairly tight range for the damage