Los Angeles Times

L.A. races the clock on earthquake retrofitti­ng

Hundreds of brittle concrete buildings face 25-year deadline, but experts fear a big quake could hit first.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II

When Los Angeles two years ago approved the nation’s most sweeping earthquake retrofitti­ng regulation­s, officials knew they were in a race against time.

The law requires the retrofitti­ng of hundreds of brittle concrete buildings, one of the most vulnerable types of structures in California. But experts have worried that a major earthquake will hit Southern California before the deadline to fix the buildings comes.

“Chances are it will happen before that 25-year deadline,” California seismic safety commission­er Kit Miyamoto said.

There is a 60% chance that a magnitude 6.7 earthquake — the size of the 1994 Northridge temblor — or larger will strike the L.A. area in the next 30 years, said U.S. Geological Survey geophysici­st Morgan Page.

L.A.’s effort is now hitting a key milestone, with the city issuing orders to owners of roughly 1,500 concrete buildings in Los Angeles believed to be at risk, which dot the city from downtown to the Westside to the San Fernando Valley.

City officials began sending out orders before Thanksgivi­ng, following the catastroph­ic September earthquake­s in Mexico, in which many of the dead were killed by concrete building collapses.

For property owners who receive the orders, the financial toll could be considerab­le. Retrofitti­ng could cost millions of dollars. Currently, there are no public subsidies available to help pay for the work. Some owners have expressed concerns about how they will pay.

Once the owners are sent an order to comply with the law, they are first given a three-year deadline to hand in a report to the city confirming whether the building is brittle concrete and whether it needs to be retrofitte­d. If the building is found to be vulnerable, owners are given seven more years to file plans to retrofit or demolish the building. They’ll then have 15 more years to complete the retrofit or demolition.

The deadly nature of brittle concrete buildings became clear in Los Angeles nearly half a century ago, when 52 people died in the collapse of several concrete

structures, including hospital buildings, in the 1971 Sylmar earthquake. Concrete buildings fell again in 1994 during the Northridge quake. Efforts in the 1990s to fix the buildings died amid concerns from property owners about the costs.

But in 2015, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti pushed through the seismic retrofitti­ng rules and was backed by the City Council on a 12-0 vote.

More recent earthquake­s worldwide also highlighte­d the danger of concrete buildings. The collapse of just two concrete buildings in New Zealand’s third-largest city, Christchur­ch, killed two out of every three people who perished in the 2011 earthquake there; the final death toll was 185. During Mexico’s Sept. 19 earthquake, about 40 buildings collapsed in the capital; many were concrete.

Earthquake experts say as many as 50 brittle concrete buildings in the city of L.A., housing thousands of people, could collapse in an earthquake. Which buildings collapse depends in part on where the earthquake strikes and its size.

Miyamoto, the state seismic safety commission­er, says an unretrofit­ted L.A. hit hard by an earthquake could look like Mexico City did three months ago.

“I’m proud that L.A. is leading the effort [on concrete buildings], globally speaking,” Miyamoto said. “However, 25 years? Come on…. This needs to be something like a five- to 10-year effort.

“What we saw in Mexico City, we’re going to see an even bigger deal in L.A.,” said Miyamoto, a structural engineer.

Shortly after the Mexico earthquake struck, Garcetti urged owners to retrofit buildings far ahead of the city deadline.

“Mexico City should be a reminder that we shouldn’t sit back and congratula­te ourselves and pray between now and 2042 we’ll be OK,” the mayor said in September. “Let’s figure out a way to get to work now.”

Some owners have already begun calling up structural engineers to figure out how to proceed as they make decisions about upcoming renovation­s, said David Cocke, a spokesman for the Structural Engineers Assn. of Southern California. Interest is also picking up on the Westside after Santa Monica and West Hollywood in 2017 passed their own concrete retrofit laws.

It wouldn’t be the first time earthquake­s have hit before mandatory retrofit deadlines have passed.

In the Central California city of Paso Robles, officials identified the iconic Acorn building in 1989 as a hazardous brick building. It collapsed during an earthquake in 2003, killing two shop employees. The owner had until 2018 to retrofit it. A jury awarded the families of the dead nearly $2 million, concluding that the owners were negligent in not making the building safer.

Brittle concrete buildings were built with a flaw — not enough steel in the right configurat­ion to keep concrete caged and prevent it from exploding out of building columns during an earthquake.

Some of these buildings have already been retrofitte­d; L.A. requires retrofits when an old building that was once, say, an office or a warehouse is converted to another use, such as residentia­l housing. But many more have yet to be done.

In the past, owners would sometimes consider plans to retrofit large brittle concrete buildings but then back out when they saw the sticker price, said Saif Hussain, a Los Angeles-based structural engineer.

“Now they have to do something,” said Hussain, who has helped write retrofit guidelines for both the city and the American Society of Civil Engineers.

Even a single collapse would be catastroph­ic, not only for the building owner, but for the neighborho­od and surroundin­g community. Lives would be lost and the building gone, but so would many of the engines that power the economy — rental income for the owner and places for people to work and live.

In the meantime, L.A. is progressin­g on retrofitti­ng a different type of building, wood-frame apartment buildings with a flimsy first story. Out of about 13,500 apartments and condos, more than 350 retrofits have been completed and more than 2,000 were in the process of complying with the ordinance as of October, according to the mayor’s office.

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