Reducing
Earthquake Losses Throughout the United States
Building Safer Structures
In this century, major earthquakes in the United States have damaged
or destroyed numerous buildings, bridges, and other structures. By monitoring
how structures respond to earthquakes and applying the knowledge gained,
scientists and engineers are improving the ability of structures to
survive major earthquakes. Many lives and millions of dollars have already
been saved by this ongoing research.
The Transamerica Pyramid in San Francisco, built to withstand earthquakes,
swayed more than 1 foot but was not damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta,
California, earthquake.
On October 17, 1989, the magnitude 7.1 Loma Prieta earthquake struck
the Santa Cruz Mountains in central California. Sixty miles away, in
downtown San Francisco, the occupants of the Transamerica Pyramid were
unnerved as the 49-story office building shook for more than a minute.
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) instruments, installed years earlier,
showed that the top floor swayed more than 1 foot from side to side.
However, no one was seriously injured, and the Transamerica Pyramid
was not damaged. This famous San Francisco landmark had been designed
to withstand even greater earthquake stresses, and that design worked
as planned during the earthquake.
Earthquakes are a widespread hazard in the United States. Colors
show magnitudes of historical earthquakes: red, 7 or greater; orange,
5.5 to 7; yellow, 4.5 to 5.5. The U.S. Geological Survey operates instruments
in many structures in the seismically active areas shown. These instruments
measure how structures respond to earthquake shaking.
Designing and building large structures is always a challenge, and
that challenge is compounded when they are built in earthquake-prone
areas. More than 60 deaths and about $ 6 billion in property damage
resulted from the Loma Prieta earthquake. As earth scientists learn
more about ground motion during earthquakes and structural engineers
use this information to design stronger buildings, such loss of life
and property can be reduced.
To design structures that can withstand earthquakes, engineers must
understand the stresses caused by shaking. To this end, scientists and
engineers place instruments in structures and nearby on the ground to
measure how the structures respond during an earthquake to the motion
of the ground beneath. Every time a strong earthquake occurs, the new
information gathered enables engineers to refine and improve structural
designs and building codes. In 1984 the magnitude 6.2 Morgan Hill, California,
earthquake shook the West Valley College campus, 20 miles away. Instruments
in the college gymnasium showed that its roof was so flexible that in
a stronger or closer earthquake the building might be severely damaged,
threatening the safety of occupants. At that time, these flexible roof
designs were permitted by the Uniform Building Code (a set of standards
used in many states). Many industrial facilities nationwide were built
with such roofs.
Seismic records (upper right) obtained during the 1984 Morgan Hill,
California, earthquake led to an improvement in the Uniform Building
Code (a set of standards used in many states). The center of the gym
roof shook sideways three to four times as much as the edges. The Code
has since been revised to reduce the flexibility of such large-span
roof systems and thereby improve their seismic resistance.
Building codes provide the first line of defense against future earthquake
damage and help to ensure public safety. Records of building response
to earthquakes, especially those from structures that failed or were
damaged, have led to many revisions and improvements in building codes.
In 1991, as a direct result of what was learned about the West Valley
College gymnasium roof, the Uniform Building Code was revised. It now
recommends that such roofs be made less flexible and therefore better
able to withstand large nearby earthquakes.
Earth scientists began recording earthquakes about 1880, but it was
not until the 1940's that instruments were installed in buildings to
measure their response to earthquakes. The number of instruments installed
in strucures increased in the 1950's and 1960's. The first abundant
data on the response of structures came from the devastating 1971 San
Fernando, California, earthquake, which yielded several dozen records.
These records were primitive by today's standards. The first records
from instruments sophisticated enough to measure twisting of a building
were obtained during the 1979 Imperial Valley, California, earthquake.
Today there are instruments installed in hospitals, bridges, dams,
aqueducts, and other structures throughout the earthquake-prone areas
of the United States, including Illinois, South Carolina, New York,
Tennessee, Idaho, California, Washington, Alaska, and Hawaii. Both the
California Division of Mines and Geology (CDMG) and the USGS operate
instruments in California. The USGS also operates instruments in the
other seismically active regions of the nation.
USGS scientists have installed instruments in a variety of structures
across the United States to monitor their behavior during earthquakes.
Examples shown include a dam, a bridge supporting a large aqueduct,
a highway overpass, and a Veterans hospital.
The majority of deaths and injuries from earthquakes are caused by
the damage or collapse of buildings and other structures. These losses
can be reduced through documenting and understanding how structures
respond to earthquakes. Gaining such knowledge requires a long-term
commitment because large devastating earthquakes occur at irregular
and often long intervals. Recording instruments must be in place and
waiting, ready to capture the response to the next temblor whenever
it occurs. The new information acquired by these instruments can then
be used to better design earthquake-resistant structures. In this way,
earth scientists and engineers help reduce loss of life and property
in future earthquakes.
Mehmet Celebi, Robert A. Page, and Linda Seekins
COOPERATING AGENCIES, COMPANIES, AND INSTITUTIONS
California Department of Transportation
California Division of Mines and Geology
City of Los Angeles
General Services Administration
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
Oregon Department of Highways
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
U.S. Department of Energy
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Washington Department of Highways
Washington Department of Natural Resources
Private building owners
For more information contact:
Earthquake Information Hotline (415) 329-4085
U.S. Geological Survey, MS 977
345 Middlefield Road, Menlo Park, CA 94025
USGS Menlo Park Earthquakes Home
Page
U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet-167-95 1995