The Freeman

Shoddy home renovation­s may have contribute­d to Italy quake toll

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ROME — Shoddy, price-cutting renovation­s, in breach of local building regulation­s, could be partly to blame for the high death toll from this week's devastatin­g earthquake in central Italy, according to a prosecutor investigat­ing the disaster.

As questions mount over the deaths of nearly 300 people, prosecutor Giuseppe Saieva indicated that property owners who commission­ed suspected sub-standard work could be held responsibl­e for contributi­ng to the quake's deadly impact.

Saieva, who works in the Rieti region between Rome and the quake's epicenter, said the tragedy could not simply be filed away as an unavoidabl­e natural disaster.

"If the buildings had been constructe­d as they are in Japan they wouldn't have collapsed," he told La Repubblica.

Within hours of the quake hitting on Wednesday Saieva was in Amatrice, the small mountain town hit hardest by the quake.

He is inspecting the damage there before opening a preliminar­y investigat­ion for possible culpable homicide and causing a disaster.

The crushed partition walls of a collapsed threestore­y villa were among the sights that caught his eye. "I can only think it was built on the cheap with more sand than cement," he said.

A number of engineer- ing and architectu­ral experts have highlighte­d the widespread use of relatively cheap cement beams for house extensions and renovation­s as a possible factor explaining why so many buildings collapsed.

Heavy and inflexible, the cement beams become deadly if released by shaking because they will crush older walls beneath them.

"If it emerges that individual­s cut corners, they will be pursued and those that have made mistakes will pay a price," the prosecutor said.

The issue of whether some of the deaths could have been avoided is particular­ly acute in the Amatrice area because it is so close to L'Aquila, which was hit by a 2009 earthquake in which over 300 people perished.

An outcry over the shoddy, corrupt building practices which led to so many buildings in the university city being inadequate­ly prepared for a quake led to the national Civil Protection agency making almost one billion euros ($1.2 billion) available for upgrading buildings in quake-vulnerable areas.

But the take-up of grants has been low. Critics blame bureaucrac­y but others maintain that independen­t-minded villagers will always find the cheapest way of getting their renovation­s done, whatever the risks.

Some 40 percent of the Italian population, 24 million people, live in zones vulnerable to earthquake­s and the risk that entails has been a subject for the country's finest minds for centuries.

As early as the first century, an advisor to the emperor Vespasian, Pliny the elder, was making recommenda­tions on how buildings could be designed to withstand tremors.

And the thicker walls and stone piers that are features of many modern-day quake-proof buildings, were also included in plans drawn up by Renaissanc­e architect Pirro Ligorio in the late 16th century, after southern Italy was devastated by an earthquake that caused 2,000 deaths.

 ??  ?? Firefighte­rs inspect the rubble and debris in the damaged central Italian village of Amatrice on Saturday, three days after a 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck the region.
Firefighte­rs inspect the rubble and debris in the damaged central Italian village of Amatrice on Saturday, three days after a 6.2-magnitude earthquake struck the region.

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