Albuquerque Journal

Buildings in Mexico City still in danger of collapse

As many as 360 structures at risk

- BY MARIA VERZA ASSOCIATED PRESS

MEXICO CITY — As many as 360 buildings and homes are in danger of collapse or have major damage in Mexico City nearly a week after a magnitude 7.1 earthquake completely collapsed 38 structures.

The risk of delayed collapse is real: The cupola of Our Lady of Angels Church, damaged and cracked by the Sept. 19 quake, split in half and crashed to the ground Sunday evening. There were no injuries.

Nervous neighbors continued calling in police on Monday as apparently new cracks appeared in their apartment blocks or existing ones worsened, even as the city struggled to get back to normal.

Officials said they had cleared only 103 of Mexico City’s nearly 9,000 schools to reopen Monday and said it could be two to three weeks before all were declared safe — leaving hundreds of thousands of children idle.

Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera said at least seven schools were among the buildings thought to be at risk of tumbling.

At several points in the city, employees gathered on sidewalks in front of their workplaces Monday refusing to enter, because they feared their buildings could collapse.

“We are afraid for our own safety,” said Maribel Martinez Ramirez, an employee of a government developmen­t agency who, along with dozens of coworkers, refused to enter their workplace Monday. “The building is leaning, there are cracks.”

Mancera said 360 “red level” buildings would either have to be demolished or receive major structural reinforcem­ent. Another 1,136 were reparable, and 8,030 of the buildings inspected so far were found to be habitable.

Search teams were still digging through dangerous piles of rubble Monday, hoping against the odds to find survivors. The city has accounted for 186 of the 324 dead nationwide.

On Sunday, marines retrieved what is believed to be the last body from a collapsed school on the city’s south side where a total of 26 people — 7 adults and 19 children — were crushed by a fallen wing of the school.

But as at other sites where there is little likelihood of finding anyone alive, the marines vowed to continue searching — avoiding use of demolition or heavy machinery — until “there is full certainty, duly certified by the appropriat­e authoritie­s, that there is nobody left, alive or dead, in the collapsed building.

Court injunction­s for seven points around the city prevent authoritie­s from using backhoes or bulldozers to remove rubble, in order to allow “search and rescue operations to continue …. to preserve the life of people who may be among the remains of the structures.”

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Family members wait in tents as rescuers remove rubble from a collapsed office building in hopes of finding survivors of the Sept. 19 earthquake in Mexico City.
REBECCA BLACKWELL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Family members wait in tents as rescuers remove rubble from a collapsed office building in hopes of finding survivors of the Sept. 19 earthquake in Mexico City.

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