LATEST NEWS
August 7, 2008
Stringent standards help Chino Hills community withstand recent earthquake
CHINO HILLS, Calif.
If an earthquake had to hit somewhere in densely populated Southern California, this relatively new suburb of 80,000 people was about the best place possible.
Buildings in the community boast the latest in plywood-reinforced walls, tied-down foundations, strengthened concrete and stronger welds.
Chino Hills is just a few kilometres from the epicentre of the recent magnitude-5.4 quake, yet it withstood the shaking with almost no damage at all. Other communities farther away saw fallen bricks, cracked walls and windows, warped door frames and broken water mains and gas lines.
One big reason: Chino Hills went up mostly in the 1990s and was built to the stringent earthquake standards that the state wants to see adopted everywhere across California before the Big One strikes.
“I was wandering around out there after the quake and it struck me that there’s no building there that’s more than 10 years old. They’re all built to the most recent codes, and I think that’s true of the whole Chino area,” said Lucy Jones, a seismologist with the U.S. Geological Survey.
Since the 1930s, California has gradually boosted its building standards. Each severe quake has prompted new rules, with the most recent major overhaul coming after the 1994 quake in the Northridge section of Los Angeles that killed 72 people.
After that disaster, the building code was amended to require, among other things, the use of plywood to reinforce sheetrock walls in homes. The new rules also prescribed a different way of welding steel that makes the welds less likely to become brittle and crack.
The quake last month proved to structural engineers that their work is paying off.
In Chino Hills, 50 kilometres southeast of Los Angeles, about 70 per cent of the homes date to the mid- to late 1990s, and the city doesn’t have a single unreinforced mortar building, said Winston Ward, the city’s chief building official. Most commercial buildings are no more than four storeys tall.
Some, including a newly built Hindu temple, have foundations that rest on a type of rubber-and-metal bumper to lessen swaying, he said.
Experts said the quake could have produced more damage if it had been centred elsewhere.
Only about 20 per cent of buildings statewide are constructed to the standards used in Chino Hills. Of the remaining 80 per cent, 40 per cent would suffer major damage during a severe earthquake and 10 per cent would collapse, said Chris Poland, chief executive at Degenkolb Engineers in San Francisco.
Associated Press
| 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 |
- History plays a role in Niagara-on-the-Lake development
- Sawing at St. Gabriel Village in North York, Ontario
- A growing, green biodiesel option
- Guelph, Ontario firm fined $200,000 in worker's death
- Aecon wins $31.5 million Smiths Falls, Ontario hospital contract
- Video Editorial: U.S. trade deficit remains stuck at $700 billion
- Sky-high View in Vancouver
- Plutonic lands GE financial services as P3 partner in B.C. Hydro bid
- New Zealand industry finds estimators in short supply
- Rising temperatures damage infrastructure in Arctic communities
- U.S. resident dies in Alberta collision
- Quebec nuke plant to get $1.9 billion upgrade
| 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)
