The rules will apply to 13,500 wood-frame buildings with so-called
soft first-stories, which often consist of thin pillars supporting
upper floors in an area where tenants park, and 1,500 so-called
brittle concrete buildings, which lack the ability to waver or bend
in a temblor, the mayor's office said.
Many soft first-story buildings are rent-stabilized, which prompted
concerns that any damage to the residences would wipe out Los
Angeles' already limited affordable-housing stock.
San Francisco and a few other California cities have instituted
rules for soft first-story buildings.
But the Los Angeles ordinance, which passed the City Council by a
unanimous vote on Friday and was quickly signed by Mayor Eric
Garcetti, marks the first time a U.S. city has mandated retrofits of
brittle concrete buildings, said U.S. Geological Survey seismologist
Lucy Jones, who last year was hired by Los Angeles as an adviser on
earthquake safety.
"I applaud the mayor and City Council for their commitment to a
safer Los Angeles that will be here for future generations," Jones
said.
Owners of the brittle concrete properties, which also are called
non-ductile concrete buildings, will have 25 years to complete
strengthening upgrades while owners of soft first-story wood-frame
properties will have seven years to finish the work, officials said.
The vulnerability of soft first-story buildings, many of which were
built in the 1960s as apartments with tuck-under parking, became
clear in the 1994 Northridge earthquake when one collapsed in Los
Angeles and killed 16 people.
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California cities are seen as facing a high risk of extensive damage
from weak buildings in an earthquake, and officials have warned that
based on historical patterns the state could be due for a major
temblor.
"We’re leading the nation in requiring this level of building safety
retrofit before, not after, the big quake we know is coming,"
Garcetti said in a statement.
Los Angeles officials have not made any firm commitment to help fund
the sweeping retrofits at commercial and apartment buildings, and
plans to pay for the work are still being formulated.
(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon; Editing by Alex Dobuzinskis and
Eric Beech)
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