In the photo I posted, the facility on the lower left side is a PHI heliport. At the very lower left are mobile homes on stilts that are pilot's berthing and bunkrooms.
Still standing.
The building at the upper center is C-Port 2. Those are covered vessel slips designed for 300 foot vessels. The one at the top of the photo is slip 9, which can fit vessels up to about 500 feet. They have a traveling gantry crane in each one designed to load deck cargo on the vessels.
Those panels were
designed to blow off and save the structure.
There are three CPorts in Fourchon, and I reckon all of them look about the same today.
Most of the rest of the buildings are still standing.
When Rita hit Cameron LA, in 2005, I was there a couple of weeks after the fact.
That
was a Cat 4 storm. It hit with a 25 storm surge, and it washed that town off the map. There was nothing substantial left.
Grand Isle's weather station never recorded a gust over 85 knots, and they were just a few miles to the east.
This is the record from that station, pressure never fell below 971 millibars and wind speeds, even in gusts, never exceeded 44 M/s.
That's 85 knots in non communist measurement.
The damage is see is what to be expected with roughly 100 knot winds.
A strong Cat 2 or weak Cat 3 at
most.
Bad, sure, but not the end of the world - storm of the apocalypse that was predicted or is still being reported as.