Earthquake Engineering Research Institute
Learning From Earthquakes

Maps and Infographics of Earthquake Impact

Please see the link below for: Death toll by region Extent of outdoor shelters Mount Everest maps and diagrams Destruction estimates Aftershocks within various time-frames post-main event http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/04/25/world/asia/nepal-earthquake-maps.html   Curated topics from the April 25, 2015, Nepal Earthquake to help inform reconnaissance activities, identify impacted regions, and help document the timeline of earthquake response/recovery. Information […]

Issues with Coordinating Aid Effort

In the days following the earthquake, the United States, China, and India began an aid effort in Nepal by organizing and sending search-and-rescue teams, foreign aid workers, and medical supplies to the country. A week after the earthquake, 16 countries have sent materials and supplies for aid relief. Organizations such as Unicef were prepared for the earthquake prior to […]

Planning for the Future: How to create a resilient and sustainable Nepal

One of the biggest questions after a natural disaster is: “how will we rebuild?” This is a careful balance of rebuilding too fast with poor construction, and taking too long to plan. The media puts a lot of pressure on governments to plan and rebuild quickly after a disaster; however, strategic planning and reflection upon […]

Volunteering as an Emergency Responder

If you’re interested in becoming an emergency responder, one way to go about it is by adding yourself to the database organized by the Structural Engineering Emergency Response (SEER) Committee of NCSEA. Here is their matrix of requirements for emergency responders. The Applied Technology Council (ATC) has posted online a recorded version of a webinar on ATC-20. Here’s an […]

How You Can Help: Crowdsourced Volunteering

People like to help. But not everyone can, or should, go to Nepal to help out in person. There are, however, a variety of different ways you can help out from home. And considering today’s large aftershock, there may be a renewed need for online volunteers. What follows is an assortment of resources. Check them out, see […]

How technology has improved emergency response in Nepal

Search and Rescue With new natural and man made disasters comes new applications of existing technology. The recent earthquake in Nepal has highlighted this through crowdsourcing data (check out our previous post), and more recently through the application of NASA technology to find people trapped under rubble. The search-and-rescue technology called FINDER (Finding Individuals for Disaster and […]

World Affairs Council: Rebuilding in Nepal

On May 13, 2015, the World Affairs Council hosted a panel discussion that focused on Rebuilding in Nepal. The event took place in downtown San Francisco, CA. The panel consisted of the following three individuals:         Norbu Tenzing, Vice President of American Himalayan Foundation         Elizabeth Hausler, Founder and CEO of Build Change         Birger Stamerdahl, President and CEO of Give2Asia The […]

Volunteering for Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team: A Guest Post!

A couple of years ago, I spent eighteen months living in South-East Asia. At weekends, keen to truly experience a part of the world I had dreamed of as a child, I would head out exploring, either by booking a cheap flight or just by heading out on my bike. Like all good explorers, I […]

Preparing for the unforseen: How Nepal is preparing for large aftershocks and monsoons

The nation of Nepal has had many trials to overcome with rebuilding a number of cities and villages due to the damage and destruction caused by the April 25th Gorkha earthquake and with the monsoon season imminently approaching. However, on May 12th, another devastating earthquake of magnitude 7.3 hit Nepal near Kodari, which is in the […]

Government Aid Yet to be Distributed

  According to an article by Reuters, the Nepali government has yet to spend the roughly 4 billion dollars of donated relief money. Rather than diving straight into reconstruction, they’ve attempted to first make changes which they believe will create greater stability in the long run. However, this has come at the cost of delaying aid […]