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Building for the Big One

What do San Francisco, Tokyo, and Istanbul have in common? They are the three most densely
populated cities on the planet where seismologists expect major earthquakes. While the events that will
inevitably shake these cities may be similar, the tolls they will take on the cities’ populations and
infrastructures will be very different. Why? The answer lies in how their buildings and bridges are
designed.
Most of the damage we associate with earthquakes involves human-built structures: people trapped by
collapsed buildings or cut off from vital water or energy supplies. How a quake will affect the people of a
city has a lot to do with how the city, its residents, and nearby governments have engineered structures
and pipelines.
It might seem obvious to say that earthquakes do most of their damage by shaking the ground. But
groundshaking is actually a complex phenomenon. Engineering the seismic safety of a structure involves
the same considerations as any real estate venture—design, construction, and location, location,
location.
When the ground beneath a building shakes, it makes the building sway as the energy of a quake’s
waves moves through it. You might think that a skyscraper would be more dangerous than a smaller
office building, but in fact, the opposite is often true. Here's why:
The taller a structure, the more flexible it is. The more flexible it is, the less energy is required to keep it
from toppling or collapsing when the earth's shaking makes it sway. You can feel this same phenomenon
while you're riding a bus or subway. It requires less effort to remain standing if you flex your body and
flow with the bumps and jolts than if you stiffly try to defy them.
Because shorter buildings are stiffer than taller ones, a three-story apartment house is considered more
vulnerable to earthquake damage than a 30-story skyscraper. When planning the seismic safety of a
building, structural engineers must design the support elements of shorter buildings to withstand
greater forces than those of taller buildings.

Of course, the materials a building is constructed from also determine its strength, and again, flexibility
is important. Wood and steel have more give than stucco, unreinforced concrete, or masonry, and they
are favored materials for building in fault zones. Skyscrapers everywhere must be reinforced to
withstand strong forces from high winds, but in quake zones, there are additional considerations.
Engineers must design in structures that can absorb the energy of the waves throughout the height of
the building. Floors and walls can be constructed to transfer the shaking energy downward through the
building and back to the ground. The joints between supportive parts of a building can be reinforced to
tolerate being bent or misshapen by earthquake forces.

Perhaps the most visually recognizable seismic safety feature of tall buildings is the truss. The
TransAmerica pyramid in San Francisco is famous for its architecture: a wide base that narrows as it goes
up increases the building’s stability. A network of diagonal trusses at its base supports the building
against both horizontal and vertical forces.

In addition to strengthening a building against earthquake shocks, engineers can actually reduce the
force a building is subjected to. They install what are called base isolators, which isolate the base of the
building from the earth's movements. Most are one of two forms. Some are like giant hockey pucks that
squish and deform as the building rocks atop them, absorbing some of the energy of the shaking. Others
are sets of two horizontal surfaces, plates made frictionless so that they will slide past each other. The
building sits on the top plates, the bottom plates rest on the ground. When the earth lurches, only the
bottom plates move, sliding back and forth under the top plates.
Location, location, location
Sometimes the characteristics of a particular earthquake and the ground a structure is on coincide in
just the right (or wrong) way, and the quake is particularly devastating. Occasionally, a seismic wave
hitting a building will have a frequency that just matches that structure's natural sway. In physics terms,
the building has the same resonant frequency as the wave. When this happens, multiple waves at the
resonant frequency pass through the structure, their effects amplifying each other. This makes for a very
destructive force.

The impact of resonance was very apparent after a large quake in Mexico City in 1985. Mid-range
buildings of 10-14 stories were in resonance with the seismic waves, causing those buildings to sufer
more damage than shorter or taller ones.

As quake waves pass through the earth, they are filtered in different ways by different kinds of soils.
Mexico City sits on a mud plain, which happened to allow waves of a particularly devastating frequency
to strike the buildings. Surprisingly, Mexico City is quite far from the epicenter of the 1985 quake. But
because of this resonance phenomenon, the city suffered much more damage than some other towns
closer to the fault.

So, the ground below a structure can be as important a safety consideration as its construction. Bedrock
absorbs more wave energy than sandy soils or landfill, so buildings on solid rock will be much less
affected than those built on softer soils. And if softer soils have water in them, they can become a little
like quicksand during an earthquake. When seismic waves pass through saturated soil, they give it a
strong squeeze. The soil loses its strength and behaves like a liquid, a process called liquefaction.
Buildings on top of liquefied soil sink, and often
topple.

Testing, testing. . . .
How can engineers know for sure that their designs will withstand quakes? The short answer is that they
have to see the building through a temblor. Quakes in Los Angeles, California, and Kobe, Japan, saw the
collapse of buildings and freeways that were built to strict seismic standards. In recent years, though,
researchers have developed shake tables that can subject full-scale buildings to quakelike forces. In
2005, engineers at the University of California, San Diego tested a seven-story, 275-ton building to see
whether it could withstand tremors like the ones delivered by the 1994 Northridge quake that hit Los
Angeles. They can use the same shake table to test models of other new building designs.

Seismic strengthening tricks are great for new buildings, but most structures in earthquake zones were
built before seismic engineering was developed. What about the beloved Golden Gate Bridge, designed
by engineers using slide rules? And critical freeway overpasses vital to a city's traffic flow? For that, we
have the after-the-fact fixes of retrofitting.

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