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The Hawthorne Bridge |

DISASTERS
Shaky Ground
A legal
battle on the Oregon Coast could foreshadow fights over Bush's faith-based
initiatives plan.
by
CHRIS LYDGATE
clydgate@wweek.com
Click
here to download a complete list of Portland's 1,800 unreinforced
masonry building. (file is an excel document, 396K in size)
If it wasn't
obvious before the Ash Wednesday quake, it is now: The real question
is not "if" but "when."
State seismic
experts reckon there is a 10 percent chance that a cataclysmic quake
(magnitude 8 or higher on the Richter scale) will strike the Cascadia
Subduction Zone in any given 50-year period.
Even a much
smaller temblor could take a toll. If it struck the Portland Hills
Fault, a quake of magnitude 6.5 (far gentler than the Ash Wednesday
quake) would probably kill 2,000 to 3,000 people and cause billions
of dollars in property damage, according to seismologist Franz Rad,
chairman of the civil engineering department at PSU.
Are we ready?
"No. No, no, no! Noooh, no, no," says state Sen. Peter Courtney.
"The city's not ready, the state's not ready, the West Coast's not
ready. It's becoming very clear to me we're all playing Russian
roulette on this."
One of the players
spinning the loaded chamber is the City of Portland.
It's well known
that the biggest potential threat to human life in a Rose City quake
comes from the city's 1,800 unreinforced masonry (URM) buildings--prewar
brick-and-mortar structures.
"Unreinforced
masonry buildings are hands-down the worst hazards in an earthquake--unless
they've been upgraded," says Mike Hagerty, chief engineer of the
city's Office of Planning and Development Review.
PSU engineers
reckon that a 6.5 quake would leave more than half the county's
URM buildings with moderate or extensive damage and dozens of buildings
in complete rubble.
Yet people who
work and live in those buildings have no way to gauge their danger.
That's because the city imposes no requirement on building owners
to inform occupants about potential earthquake hazards. In fact,
the city hasn't even identified high-risk buildings--although other
entities, from the city of San Francisco to the Portland Public
School District, have demonstrated that such an analysis is feasible.
During the past
three weeks, WW has been reviewing a list of all the city's
URM buildings, obtained through a public-records request. We also
dug through several dozen seismic analyses buried in bureaucratic
file cabinets.
We found that
although there is widespread agreement that many Portland buildings
pose a potential hazard, there is marked reluctance--on the part
of engineers, bureaucrats and emergency planners--to identify specific
examples.
One obstacle
is technical. Seismology is a notoriously uncertain science, and
predicting the damage to any particular building especially so.
Many variables come into play: the magnitude and duration of the
quake, the soil, the design and construction of the building, how
well it has been maintained and its age. One building may escape
unscathed, while its next-door neighbor, despite similar construction,
may collapse.
But much of
the reluctance has more to do with politics than seismology.
"If we were
to say the PGE building is unsafe, or Nike Town, then it would be
a problem for us because they might sue us," says Yumei Wang, director
of the state's Earthquake and Landslide Programs.
"I don't think
it's in the best interest to go pointing fingers," says PSU engineering
professor Carol Hasenberg. "The building owners will say, 'Forget
it, we don't want to be demonized.'"
The suggestion
that potential hazards be publicly identified sends the building-owners
lobby into a shudder of dismay. "We do not support the idea of putting
stickers on buildings," says Robin White, executive vice president
of the Building and Office Management Association. "It would mislead
people more than give them real information."
Nonetheless,
other cities have taken a more aggressive stance. In 1986, San Francisco
mandated that its 2,068 URMs undergo seismic upgrade by 2006. So
far, two-thirds have been completely or partially retrofitted.
In order to
illustrate the scope and magnitude of the problem, WW has
selected seven structures from the long list of those that may pose
a hazard to their occupants in case of a major quake.
We're not saying
they are dangerous. But we are saying that they--and all unreinforced
masonry buildings--are potentially dangerous. Anyone who
works, lives, or plays in them is entitled to ask the owners about
preparations for disaster.
MULTNOMAH
COUNTY COURTHOUSE
1021
SW 4th Ave.
Built 1911
Floors: 8 + basement
Cops and crooks,
judges and jurors, lawyers and litigants: The courthouse is the
Portland legal world's ground zero--in more ways than one. According
to a seismic analysis performed in 1991, the building's walls are
incapable of standing up to a major earthquake. "Building collapse
then becomes a likely event," the report states. "The lateral strength
of the [courthouse] is far less than appropriate for all except
the smallest earthquakes."
Roughly 2,000
to 5,000 people enter the courthouse on a typical weekday. "It's
a tremendous liability if an earthquake were to occur," says engineer
Dan Brown, the county's director of facilities and property management.
Retrofitting the building would cost about $40 million. So far,
the county has failed to come up with the money.
CLEVELAND
HIGH SCHOOL
Southeast
26th Avenue and Powell Boulevard
Built: 1926
Floors: 3
Over the years,
thousands of Portlanders have paid their dues at Cleveland. Few
of them realize their alma mater is rated as "high structural seismic
risk." In fact, out of hundreds of buildings in the Portland Public
School system, Cleveland is currently rated as posing the highest
risk to the largest number of students, teachers and administrators.
According to a seismic analysis performed in 1998, the school's
original building--which includes classrooms, the auditorium and
the old gymnasium--can withstand only 1 percent of the expected
forces in a major quake. "Our top priority is getting the students
out safely," says Pam Brown of the Portland Public School District.
Cleveland is slated for a retrofit this summer.
MONTGOMERY
COURT
1802
SW 10th Ave.
Built 1920
Floors: 4 + basement
Sad to say,
the ivory tower is wobbly. This PSU dormitory, home to 145 students,
is one of several campus buildings that pose a potential seismic
hazard. According to a 1997 seismic analysis, the building's structure
"is not capable of adequately resisting earthquake ground motion"
and exhibits "significant weaknesses," in particular a lack of devices
to keep the walls from collapsing.
PSU administrators
hope to demolish the dorm eventually, plus others (including the
Adeline, the Blackstone, the King Albert, the St. Helens and the
Stratford), which together house nearly 400 students. But right
now they don't have enough money to draw up a priority list, according
to Dick Piekenbrock, campus architect. PSU is not alone: Reed College's
Eliot Hall also could pose a hazard in a quake.
CLINTON STREET
THEATER
2524
SE Clinton St.
Built
1913
Floors:
2
Portland wouldn't
be the same without the Clinton Street Theater, epicenter of the
cinematic revolution for at least 20 years (or as long as it's been
screening The Rocky Horror Picture Show.) But based on its
unreinforced masonry, age, poor condition, vertical irregularities
and non-structural falling hazards, if the unimaginable occurs,
the Clinton Street could stage a rocky horror of its own. Besides
the theater, the building houses a salon, a bar, a vintage clothing
store and 10 apartments. "We don't know the nature and extent of
the problems at the Clinton Street Theater," says owner Dick Helzer,
a Beaverton lawyer. "We're afraid the necessary work would mean
demolishing the building. But it's stood up for 100 years. How much
more assurance can you get?"
U.S. CUSTOMS
BUILDING
220
NW 8th Ave.
Built
1898
Floors:
4
Overlooking
the North Park Blocks, this stately example of neoclassical architecture
now houses roughly 250-300 employees of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The federal General Services Administration, which manages the building,
was not willing to share its seismic analysis without jumping through
bureaucratic hoops. But apparently the situation is dire enough
that the GSA is trying to kick its tenants out by the end of the
year. Upgrading the building could cost up to $10 million, according
to GSA public information officer Bill Dubray. "It's fair to say
we are concerned with this building," he told WW.
GOVERNOR
BUILDING
404
SW 2nd Ave.
Built
1906
Floors:
5
There's no mistaking
the faint aroma of mildew and despair that permeates the lobby of
the Governor Building. Long a haven for low-rent offices (including
Second Avenue Records and some very fine freelance writers), it
was sold two years ago to real-estate powerhouse Schnitzer Northwest,
which intends to demolish the building and replace it with a 20-story
office tower. Without a formal seismic analysis, it's impossible
to know how the building would fare in a quake. But based on its
unreinforced masonry, its age, height, footprint and non-structural
falling hazards, two Portland engineers contacted by WW said
the building could pose a potential hazard. According to Traci Gedlich,
the leasing agent at Norris Beggs, however, the Governor "did great"
in the last temblor.
HAWTHORNE
BRIDGE
Built
1910
When the Hawthorne
Bridge reopened in April 1999 after an agonizing 13-month facelift,
Portland held a blowout party to celebrate. So it may come as some
surprise that despite spending $22 million to paint and renovate
the bridge, Multnomah County did nothing to strengthen it in case
of an earthquake. The reason, of course, is money. "It's kind of
a hard thing to balance," says Multnomah County spokesman Mike Pullen.
"Do you make the sidewalks wider or do you strengthen it for an
earthquake that may never happen?"
From an engineering
standpoint, the Hawthorne presents two major problems: First, a
quake could fracture the bridge's bearings, which connect the main
truss to the supporting towers. Then there's the "Godzilla scenario,"
in which a big jolt sets the bridge's massive counterweights (850,000
pounds each) swaying like a pair of gigantic metronomes, climaxing
in an epic crescendo of destruction.
In fact, all
six of the county's Willamette bridges (Broadway, Burnside, Hawthorne,
Morrison, Sauvie Island and Sellwood) pose a potential quake hazard:
The county has plans to strengthen them, including a full upgrade
of the Burnside Bridge, at a cost of $53 million over the next 20
years.
--David Shafer
contributed to this report.
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