Earthquake Engineering Research Institute
Learning From Earthquakes

Post-quake Inspections Mislead Building Occupants in Christchurch

February 14, 2018

By the EERI Reconnaissance Team.

The Canterbury Television building was subjected the 7.0 magnitude earthquake near Christchurch, New Zealand in September 2010.

The following magnitude 6.1 earthquake in February 2011 caused the building to collapse and resulted in the deaths of 115 people. An earthquake reconnaissance team inspected the building after the earthquake and marked it with a green sticker. They were using the rapid assessment system which originated in California and has been commonly used since the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in the San Francisco Bay Area. While the inspection system aims to determine if people are banned from the building (red), can gain limited access (yellow), or can continue to occupy the building (green), it is the owner’s responsibility to get a more in-depth and complete inspection. The father of the system, structural engineer Ron Gallagher, is writing a report on the lessons learned from Christchurch and hopes that, in the future, the system will educate building owners and occupants on the meaning of the colored tags and the necessary steps to be taken afterwards.

 

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