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Killer quake still haunts Mexico City

Big structural risks remain amid push to retrofit buildings

- By Rong-Gong Lin II and Cecilia Sanchez Los Angeles Times cecilia.sanchez@latimes.com

MEXICO CITY — Certain types of buildings are especially vulnerable to collapse during earthquake­s — and earthquake-prone Mexico City is filled with them.

Those with so-called brittle concrete frames are well-known hazards. Buildings with a weak first story, often supported by narrow columns to accommodat­e parking, are also known to be dangerous.

How many such buildings exist in this 573square-mile metropolis, home to nearly 9 million people, is hard to know. The government has never cataloged its real estate to identify risky structures.

Now, in the wake of the magnitude 7.1 earthquake that killed more than 360 people in September, some experts are urging city officials to do just that — so tenants can be warned and building owners can be ordered to retrofit them with steel braces or new walls.

“We have to move very fast,” while the issue is fresh in people’s minds, said Sergio Alcocer, an earthquake expert at the Institute of Engineerin­g at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

Such an undertakin­g is costly and has long been viewed as politicall­y difficult. Many cities have resisted similar calls.

But political sentiment can shift. In 2015, Los Angeles became the biggest city in California to pass a law to identify vulnerable concrete buildings and apartments with weak ground stories and mandate retrofitti­ng.

Once building owners are notified, they have seven years to fix weak ground stories and 25 years to complete modificati­ons to stabilize brittle concrete frames.

In an interview, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti encouraged Mexico City to start now.

“Waiting causes lives to be lost,” he said.

Los Angeles anticipate­d organized opposition by building owners and overcame it by conducting two years of public education efforts on the risks of inaction. But Mexico City hasn’t had that level of discourse, and there is an expectatio­n that owners would also oppose mandatory retrofits.

Alcocer, a member of a mayoral commission establishe­d to make recommenda­tions for the city’s long-term seismic resiliency efforts, said he imagined offering owners economic incentives such as waiving property taxes or easing the financial burden with city loans or bonds.

Alcocer estimated that the cost of retrofits in many cases would be 15 percent to 20 percent of the cost of replacing a building.

A total of 42 buildings collapsed and as many as 1,000 more were damaged in the Sept. 19 earthquake that was centered about 80 miles southeast of Mexico City.

Many of the buildings that fell were made of brittle concrete, including a sevenstory office building on Avenida Alvaro Obregon in Mexico City, where 49 people died — the largest death toll at any one site. That building was a “flat slab” structure, a design that lacks horizontal beams that are far more durable in an earthquake.

Flat slab constructi­on was very popular in Mexico City in the 1960s and ’70s, Alcocer said.

“This system is not a proper system for a high seismic area,” he said.

Retrofitte­d buildings survived just fine in the earthquake.

“We have the prescripti­on,” said Saif Hussain, a Los Angeles-based structural engineer who visited Mexico City in October with the Applied Technology Council, which develops nationally recognized retrofit standards. “It’s just a matter of people being aware of it, and implementi­ng it — and the political will.”

Alcocer said he recently met with Mexico City’s mayor, Miguel Angel Mancera, and suggested the city make a plan to review and eventually strengthen certain classes of buildings known to be hazardous, as well as evaluate all schools, hospitals and markets.

“He’s very open to it,” Alcocer said.

Mexico City residents said in interviews that they would welcome new safety measures. But many doubted that the government had the political will to even conduct a census of buildings, let alone order costly improvemen­ts.

“I think the government should tell us if the area is safe, if our building could be in danger if they do not make the right revisions,” said Claudia Centeno, a 40-year-old nurse who was told that the damage to her apartment was only cosmetic.

“I’m going to leave this building as soon as my rental agreement is up, but the next people who want to live here may be at risk and might not know if the government says nothing,” she said.

After the quake, city inspectors fanned out to assess the damage.

But they were not checking for vulnerabil­ity to the next earthquake, according to Elizabeth Cochran, a U.S. Geological Survey seismologi­st.

Cochran recently visited Mexico City with the Earthquake Engineerin­g Research Institute as part of a mission to learn from the September earthquake.

 ?? GARY CORONADO/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Some experts say the government in Mexico needs to check suspect buildings in the wake of the quake and make owners fix dangerous structures.
GARY CORONADO/LOS ANGELES TIMES Some experts say the government in Mexico needs to check suspect buildings in the wake of the quake and make owners fix dangerous structures.

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