Los Angeles Times

Crumbled buildings renew calls for stronger designs

SAN FRANCISCO - Seismic safety experts long have warned that brittle concrete frame buildings pose a particularly deadly risk during a major earthquake.

But a horrifying video taken during last week's magnitude 7.1 Mexico quake may do more to highlight the risk than years of reports and studies.

In it, sirens blare, utility poles sway. Then in the background, a building wobbles. Concrete starts falling out of a ground-floor column. Then the columns flex, and the upper floors come crashing down, sinking into a cloud of dust.

"Dios mio! Dios mio!" a woman is heard saying. "My God! My God!"

The crumbled Enrique Rebsamen school in Mexico City - a three-story structure where at least 25 died, including 21 students - was made of concrete, as were many other structures that fell to the ground.

While they may be stout and muscular in appearance, concrete buildings without a robust level of steel reinforcement can see their columns peel off in chunks and then explode when exposed to violent side-to-side shaking.

Collapses of concrete buildings have been documented worldwide for

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times7 min read
An Ambulance, An Empty Lot And A Loophole: One Man's Fight For A Place To Live
After a hard day's work, Cameron Gordon sometimes finds a bit of solace as he lounges on the gurney in his yard, surveying a patchwork of weeds, potted plants, garden beds and a hose that meanders across the dirt. This is where his struggle to naviga
Los Angeles Times4 min readCrime & Violence
Editorial: Indiana’s Private-for-profit Asset Forfeiture Scheme Undermines Justice
Policing and prosecuting for profit contradicts reasonable notions of justice and fairness, yet it’s allowed in most U.S. states. Using a process known as civil asset forfeiture, law enforcement agencies seize private property that they claim was som
Los Angeles Times3 min readAmerican Government
LZ Granderson: The Chaos In Congress Is More Dangerous Than The Protests On Campuses
Last week Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) ignored Donald Trump's endorsement of Rep. Mike Johnson (R-La.) as House speaker and announced plans to try to force him out. One can only assume she is making that attempt for attention, because it seems

Related Books & Audiobooks