January 25, 2008
GEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF CANADA
Canada’s seismic risk map is reflected in updates to the National Building Code for earthquake standards.
Building to resist the risks of a seismic event in Canada
‘Ductile’ steel has an advantage in resisting earthquakes
Canada’s seismic risk map is constantly upgraded as more accurate information is collected. The Geological Survey of Canada released its first survey in 1953 with updates in 1970, 1985 and 2005. The latest survey formed the basis of earthquake standards under the most recent National Building Code update.
The Canadian Institute of Steel Construction (CISC) has been offering a series of commercial building and seismic-design courses across the country to help identify the best way to use steel to provide greater earthquake resistance in buildings up to 10 storeys tall.
“We don’t like to use terms like ‘earthquake-proof,’ ” says Mike Gilmor, president of the CISC. “But we like to think of steel as a more ductile material, better able to resist seismic forces. The 2005 National Building Code of Canada is a reflection of the 2005 Geological Survey and makes provisions for a one-in-2,500 year seismic occurrence. There are many ways to use steel to satisfy those provisions, but we can help professionals to do it in the most economical and efficient way possible.”
Stephane Mazzotti, a seismologist with the Geological Survey of Canada in Sidney, B.C. says the quality of information in that province is based on a steady stream of real data — actual earthquakes under scientific scrutiny.
“In B.C. and Yukon we’ve recorded hundreds of earthquakes over the past 30 years or so, and therefore we have a fairly robust idea of the magnitude of earthquakes that might occur every 100 years,” he says. “In other areas like northern Ontario and Manitoba, that becomes much more dicey because they don’t have the same records to work with.”
An initiative by the B.C. provincial government has earmarked $1.5 billion over a 15-year period to upgrade 800 B.C. schools to new earthquake standards.
Only a few schools have been upgraded so far, but the pace of construction is being stepped up says Tim White, a project engineer with Bush Bohlman & Partners in Vancouver, a practice working with the B.C. school retrofit program.
“It’s often more economical to upgrade using like materials, but in B.C. we’re more typically using steel in two-storey schools.” As part of an $800,000 retrofit of Frank Hurt secondary School in Surrey, for example, an existing steel frame inside the gymnasium was replaced with an updated design meeting the new seismic standards.
White notes that while B.C. is leading the country with its seismic assessment program, municipalities, such as Quebec City are taking stock of seismic risk in civic structures. The Chalk River nuclear facility in northern Ontario was shut down last November because of concerns about a hypothetical earthquake interrupting its electrical power supply.
Toronto’s Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction is also focusing attention on the Ottawa-Montreal corridor as a region facing considerable property damage in the event of an earthquake.
“Steel is a good choice in British Columbia, in Quebec and around the country,” says Gilmor. “Steel provides myriad choices to help design buildings resistant to seismic forces.”
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Professional Engineers Ontario unveils new performance standards for demolition
- British Columbia’s construction unions and contractors ratify agreement on drug testing
- Digging deep at Tucker Hi-Rise’s X Condos project
- Deaths of SNC-Lavalin workers in Algeria highlight risks of overseas operations
- Toddglen Construction builds new Neighbourhood on Bloor Street
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Lineup at the Bars in Toronto
- Industry welcomes $1.1 billion investment in infrastructure by Ontario
- Ontario Association of Architects produces client hiring guide
- Macivor moving on from Ontario industry secretariat
- Behind the Post in Etobicoke, Ontario
- Video Editorial: U.S. trade deficit remains stuck at $700 billion
- Integrated Team Solutions is the preferred proponent for Woodstock, Ontario hospital
- GO Transit wraps up Lakeshore expansion job
- Norwegian solar panel firm to build Quebec plant
- Columns installed in London Olympic stadium
| ALEX’S BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in Canada's economic environment. He also shares light-hearted reflections on life and current events.
Economics Blog More 
- Industrial Construction is Resource-related (August 28, 2008)
- Construction Starts are Down about One-quarter So Far this Year (August 22, 2008)
- Canada’s Slide in Housing Starts Begins (August 21, 2008)
Lifestyle Blog More 
- What’s Red, Pretty and Prickly? (August 26, 2008)
- What’s Happened to Jokes Isn’t Funny (August 25, 2008)
| PROJECT NEWS BRIEFS |
Updates on Canadian construction projects from Reed Construction Data’s research team. More 
- Salter Pilon Architecture Inc. wins contract to design Bradford recreation centre (Aug 22, 2008)
- Shore Tilbe Irwin & Partners begin designs for LEED Silver-compliant community centre (Aug 22, 2008)
- Salter Pilon Architecture nears completion of Georgian Manor working drawings (Aug 22, 2008)
- Town of Markham proposes new LEED-compliant Cathedral Town firehall (Aug 22, 2008)
- Townline Group plans redevelopment of former Fantasy Garden World property (Aug 18, 2008)
