Videos seem to show that many of the buildings that collapsed in Turkey are likely older, low- and mid-rise concrete structures that lacked sufficient reinforcement … characteristics shared by many buildings in California.
There Are At-Risk Buildings Here
Turkey’s building codes are on par with California’s, said Monica Kohler, a research professor of civil engineering at Caltech. Problems arise when buildings aren’t constructed properly or when older structures built to outdated codes haven’t been retrofitted, leaving them vulnerable.
“I think that what we have to be really careful about is to think: ‘You know, no wonder it happened to them. It’s never gonna happen to us.’ It could happen to us for some of the same reasons,” said Kohler.
Is your building vulnerable?
“The buildings that collapsed (in Turkey) are most likely those that were built prior to 1980s, and some that weren’t built to code requirements,” said Ertugrul Taciroglu, chair of civil and environmental engineering at UCLA.
It’s impossible to tell for certain without an assessment by an expert, but if you’re in an older building that was constructed prior to the 1994 Northridge quake, it’s worth finding out if retrofits are necessary. Older single-family homes often need to be braced and bolted. Unreinforced masonry buildings, non-ductile concrete, and soft-story structures have all shown vulnerability during earthquakes. The city of L.A. does have a searchable database of non-ductile concrete and soft-story buildings.
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