Is Vancouver Island Ready for a Large Quake?
As an engineer who advises governments, organizations, and companies on how to prepare their buildings and facilities to survive earthquakes I have visited or sent teams to the aftermath of most key quakes in the world since 1970, observing how new and old buildings performed during the quakes and learning important lessons.
From my perspective, the Magnitude 8.8 quake that hit Chile on February 27, 2010 was the most important earthquake of the last 100 years – and particularly for British Colombia. It was the first mega-quake, its magnitude near 9, to strike a developed country with rigorous building codes. Modern cities full of state-of-the-art buildings were tested by intense ground shaking
that lasted more than 120 seconds — compared to about 40 seconds for the 1906 and 20 seconds for the 1989 San Francisco earthquakes, which had magnitudes of 7.9 and 6.9, respectively.
Unfortunately, despite Chile’s exacting construction codes, which for exceeded those of Vancouver and Western Canada, the performance of numerous new high-rise buildings was poor – two collapsed and many were not repairable. That was not expected.