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New Research on Soft-Story Retrofitting

A team of researches at Colorado State University have found that earthquake retrofitting significantly lessens the probability of a soft-story building’s collapse.  While the stronger earthquakes that were tested caused some damage to the model buildings, the structures remained safe for occupancy, unlike the models that had not been strengthened prior to testing.

To read the article with details about the research, follow the link below:

http://phys.org/news/2013-08-team-earthquake-retrofits-soft-first-floor.html

As always, if you have any questions or concerns about soft-story retrofitting or your building, feel free to give me a call at (510)272-9999 or e-mail me at info@test.enginious-structures.com.

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Public Meeting to Discuss Proposed Required Retrofit of Soft Story Buildings in Berkeley

There will be a public meeting on Thursday, July 25, 2013 at 7 PM in the North Berkeley Senior Center (1901 Hearst Avenue). This meeting will introduce and discuss a proposed ordinance that requires residential buildings with five or more units to be seismically retrofitted if the building is constructed with soft, weak, or open front conditions. The proposal requires owners to submit a building permit application to retrofit the building within three years and to complete retrofit within an additional two years. A similar ordinance was just passed in San Francisco, and details of that ordinance can be found here.

A soft story building is a wood-frame building with more than one story, typically having extensive ground story openings, garage doors, or open-air spaces with little or no enclosing solid wall. These buildings are dangerous because they have the most potential to collapse and sustain serious damage in the event of an earthquake. There are currently 154 buildings on the soft story inventory prepared by the City in 2005. If you are an owner of one of these buildings, a notice of this public meeting should have been mailed to you.

Further details on this proposed ordinance can be found here. Following the initial public meeting, the proposal will be presented to the Disaster and Fire Safety Commission, Housing Advisory Commission, Rent Stabilization Board, and Planning Commission. Another public meeting will be held in the fall before an ordinance is submitted to the City Council for approval.

As always, if you have any questions about your building or soft-story conditions, give me a call at (510)272-9999 or e-mail me at info@test.enginious-structures.com.

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SF’s Mandatory Seismic Retrofit Program for Soft-Story Buildings

Below is a summary of what you need to know about the new ordinance in plain words.

IS MY BUILDING A SOFT-STORY BUILDING?

If the following four requirements apply to your building, then it is a suspect for a soft story building.

1) Wood-frame building with either 3+ stories, OR 2 stories over a basement/underfloor area with any part above grade. The first story of any building counts as a story.

2) 5+ dwelling units.  A unit is any individual residential unit.  It includes a guestroom, w/ or w/o a kitchen, within either a tourist/residential hotel/motel.  Does not include “housekeeping room.” Includes an area that is used as a dwelling unit, whether it is is approved or unapproved for residential use.

3) Constructed/permit to construct applied for before January 1, 1978.

4)  Has not been previously seismically strengthened. Exceptions are listed at the bottom of this post.

HOW DO I KNOW FOR SURE?

If you think your building meets all four of these points, then the city should send you a notification in late fall or early winter of this year, as to whether your building is a suspected soft-story building, and will need further engineering evaluation and possible retrofitting. There is currently no official list of “unsafe” properties. All addresses subject to the ordinance will be posted on the Department of Building Inspection’s website and updated regularly.

The ordinance requires that if you believe your building meets the requirements, but do not receive notification, then you must notify the Department of the address/location, and they will review the building and provide subsequent notice. In plain terms, it says that even if you have not received a notice, you are not necessarily exempt from the requirements of the ordinance. If you do not receive a notice, but wish to make sure of the status of your building, you may choose to get in touch with an engineer/architect to evaluate your building, and decide at that point how to proceed.

OK, I GOT MY NOTICE.  WHAT DO I DO NOW?

Once you receive your notice, the below process should follow:

Step 1 – Complete a screening form within a year of notification

Retain an architect/engineer to submit to the Department a completed Screening Form. Buildings that are exempt because of previous voluntary retrofitting can submit the Screening Form without an architect/engineer. See the bottom of this post for what qualifies as applicable voluntary upgrades.

The Screening Form is used to determine whether a building is subject to this ordinance, or whether it is exempt.  The form should be included in your letter of notification from the Department. If a building is determined to be subject to this program, then it is assigned to one of four Compliance Tiers.  These tiers essentially determine how quickly you will need to finish your retrofitting work.

COMPLIANCE TIERS:

The following is a basic definition of the buildings that fall within each compliance tier. However, this list is not all-inclusive, and we cannot guarantee the classification of your building according to these descriptions.

Tier 1 – Buildings that house civic, social, religious, or recreational assemblies; restaurants, bars, etc.; educational buildings, schools, etc.; assisted living facilities, social rehabilitation facilities, retirement homes, and residential care facilities

Tier 2 – Buildings with 15+ dwelling units, unless your building is in Tiers 1 or 4.

Tier 3 – Buildings that don’t fall within the constraints of Tiers 1, 2, or 4; if your building doesn’t match any of the other tiers.

Tier 4 – Buildings with commercial businesses, offices, professional services, etc. on the first story or in a basement extending above grade. Also, if your building is in a mapped liquefaction zone, unless your building qualifies for Tier 1. The city should be coming out with a detailed map of liquefaction zones soon, but until then, you can click here for some more information.

Timeline:

All time period are measured in years from 90 days after the date of passing the ordinance. In other words, however many years starting July 18, 2013.

Step 2 – Obtain a building permit

According to your tier and timeline, submit an application for a building permit with documents indicating your proposed retrofit to the Department.  This permit should be separate from permits for other building alterations/repairs, unless it relates directly to the seismic work.

In order to submit an application for a permit, you will need to submit construction drawings with engineering analysis. To do this, you need to hire either a civil/structural engineer. If you would like an estimate for how much this may cost you, feel free to give us a call. Our number is at the top of the page, and the bottom of this post.

Step 3 – Retrofit!

Step 4 – Completed work

Once the seismic work has been completed, you will receive a Certificate of Final Completion and Occupancy. You will then have 15 years, during which your building will not be identified as a seismic hazard, unless it is significantly altered or damaged.

WHAT IF MY BUILDING’S ALREADY HAD RETROFITTING DONE?

There are two exemption clauses.  If your building meets either of the two requirements below, then it is probably exempt from further retrofitting.

1)  A building that has been seismically strengthened to meet/exceed standards of Section 1604.11 of Code within 15 years prior to operative date or ordinance.  You still need to submit documentation to the Department showing that retrofit work was permitted, completed, and maintained.

2) If your building has completed voluntary seismic strengthening under Administrative Bulletin AB-094.  Then, fill out the Screening Form and Optional Evaluation Form.

The full text of the final signed ordinance can be found here:
Mandatory Seismic Retrofit Ordinance

For more information from the City of San Francisco on the Soft Story Program, click here.

As always, if you have any further questions about your building, soft-story retrofitting, or if you need an estimate for an evaluation report/retrofit design, give me a call at (510)272-9999 or e-mail me at info@test.enginious-structures.com.

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Mandatory Retrofitting of SF’s Soft Story Buildings

Last week, San Francisco’s Mayor Ed Lee and the Board of Supervisors and City Officials signed the Mandatory Seismic Retrofit Program for Soft Story Wood Frame Buildings.  This measure will strengthen thousands of San Francisco’s buildings and assure a faster recovery from future earthquakes. Over 55,000 San Franciscans live in wood-frame buildings built before 1978, which are at least three stories tall and have at least five residential units. These apartments are unsafe because an earthquake shakes the bottom floor that supports the weight of the apartments above, causing buildings to collapse and pancake. Retrofitting involves adding new walls or steel braces to strengthen the ground story. The Community Action Plan for Seismic Safety (CAPSS) estimates the cost of this structural work to be around $60,000 to $130,000 per building.

The Mandatory Seismic Retrofit Program will be executed over the next seven years, starting with a mandatory notice and evaluation period beginning in late this fall. After that, buildings classified as soft story buildings will be placed into four tiers with 4-7 years to complete the necessary structural work.  Those with a shorter time-frame are buildings that have a particularly high potential for loss of life, such as buildings that house a nightclub, senior citizens or students, or buildings with 15 or more units. Property owners must pay for the work out of their own pockets or take out a loan; however, they can fully pass on the costs of the seismic retrofitting to their tenants — even those protected by rent control — over a period of 20 years.  There is also some financial support for building owners, offering finance packages from the banking industry so that owners can meet the new requirements.  This is the latest measure in the Earthquake Safety Implementation Program (ESIP) that means to reduce San Francisco’s most costly risks in the event of a future earthquake.

If you want to check a list of buildings that may be affected by this ordinance, click here.  If your building is on the list, and you have any questions or concerns, or just want to know more about soft-story retrofitting, give me a call at (510)272-9999 or e-mail me at info@test.enginious-structures.com.

See the article below for more information:

http://californianewswire.com/2013/04/19/CNW15327_123823.php

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D/B or not D/B, that is the question

The term “soft story” building describes a building with a level or story that is significantly more flexible than stories above it, such as an open parking area or a commercial space, which can be hazardous in the event of an earthquake.  The Bay Area has thousands of these building.  Damage to soft story buildings has resulted in fatalities and serious injuries to tenants and has caused significant economic loss to the building owners at the time of two most recent significant earthquakes in California, 1989 Loma Prieta and 1994 Northridge earthquakes.

According to Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG), the regional planning agency for the nine counties and 101 cities and towns of the San Francisco Bay region, 160,000 housing units will become uninhabitable in the next major earthquake in the Bay Area. Most of the losses will result from collapsed apartment buildings with parking or commercial space on all or part of the first floor.  San Francisco has an estimated 2,800 to 4,400 soft story buildings, Oakland has 1,500, and Alameda, Berkeley and San Leandro have approximately 1,000 soft story building combined.

Recognizing the potential danger, many Bay Area cities, including Berkeley, Oakland, Alameda and San Francisco, have passed soft story ordinances which require various degrees of engineering evaluation of the potential danger of these buildings.  While these ordinances don’t currently mandate the seismic retrofitting of these building, some offer financial incentives for owners who voluntarily strengthen their buildings now.  Many owners have decided to upgrade and take advantage of these incentives, and by doing so protected their properties in the event of the earthquake.

As more building owners face decisions about how to strengthen their soft story buildings, I see a recurring trend of Design/Build (D/B) companies sprouting all over California, offering owners a one stop shop for their seismic retrofitting needs.  D/B firms provide both engineering design and construction services under the same umbrella.  They offer an alternative to the traditional Design/Bid/Build (D/B/B) method.  In the D/B/B method of construction, the owner selects an experienced, independent engineer who prepares a set of structural engineering documents to meet the requirements or the ordinance or any higher level of seismic safety desired by the owner.  With the help of the engineer, the owner solicits bids from several local contractors experienced in seismic retrofitting and selects one according to the proposed price and their personal preference.  Building owners have to decide – D/B or not D/B, and that is the question I try to help to answer in this article.

To Design/Build

Design/Build firms claim that as experts in seismic retrofitting, they do a lot of these types of projects and, as a result, offer customers an economy of scale. They will do engineering and plans for free as long as you hire them to do the construction, potentially saving customers thousands of dollars in engineering fees. The local building department knows them and their work, and there will be no surprises with a plan check.

Not to Design/Build

The simplicity of using a single firm for the design and construction is appealing, but can be misleading. Owners considering hiring a Design/Build firm for retrofitting of their soft story building should evaluate whether the following drawbacks of D/B method outweigh its potential benefits.

It may cost more to Design/Build

While the Design/Build method offers a building owner an advantage of knowing the final costs ahead of starting of the design process, it may not be the most cost effective way of meeting the requirements of the ordinance.  Every building is unique and requires a different structural approach. D/B firms tend to use the same design for all buildings, even if the design may not be the most efficient way to meet a desired level of seismic safety.

The D/B method lacks the competition that the alternative Design/Bid/Build method of construction naturally affords. Some owners try to encourage competition by asking engineers to assemble teams with local contractors to provide Design/Build bids. Many independent engineers are not comfortable with this approach because the initial engineering design necessary for the contractor’s bid is free and another D/B team may end up getting the project. Having done this in the past, I found that owners often get several completely different designs and end up comparing “apples to oranges’.  While various designs may be acceptable to the building department, they may provide different levels of seismic protection.

No free engineering

The offer of free engineering may initially seem attractive; however, common sense tells us that these costs are easily hidden in the Design/Build estimate, especially since engineering fees are a small portion of the total construction budget of a seismic retrofit project. The owner will pay for engineering one way or another.

Conflict of Interest

The Design/Build method has an inherent conflict of interest because the Engineer on the project is also the contractor.  The engineer should be responsible for inspecting the construction to make sure that the work is done in accordance with code and approved drawings.  If he needs to force the construction workers to fix errors that are inevitable in any project. He will affect his company’s bottom line and may be tempted to look the other way, when things are not done right.

No professional liability protection for the owner

Design/Build companies provide less liability protection.  They usually don’t carry an expensive, but necessary, Professional Liability Insurance, also known as Errors and Omissions (E&O) insurance. D/B companies tend to opt instead for cheaper Commercial Liability Insurance as their only means of project insurance.   In addition, Design/Build firms are often owned by or employ Civil Engineers, rather than Structural Engineers who must meet more stringent licensure requirements and are better equipped to deal with complex engineering concepts required in earthquake engineering.

Here today, gone tomorrow

Design/Build may not be around when you need them.  Choose a company that has been around for a while, and will be around if a problem occurs years later. Design/Build firms often spring up like seasonal Halloween stores when there is a demand for seismic retrofit work, then close their doors and move on to the next trendy item on the Design/Build scene. This is exactly what happened in 1990’s, when there was a lot of seismic strengthening of unreinforced masonry (brick) buildings.  As soon as this market faded, they closed their doors and disappeared. I wouldn’t be surprised if some of the same people have hung a new shingle with a new name. What will you do if there is an issue with your retrofit that comes to light or information is needed about the works done ten years down the road?

After considering the above, if the owner still feels strongly that they want a D/B firm to help them with the strengthening of the building, I would recommend to get at least 3 bids from D/B firms experienced in retrofitting of similar building in the same locality and ensure that the scope of the proposed work meets the same engineering standard/ code and provides comparable level of earthquake protection.

Design/Bid/Build Method – the alternative

The traditional Design/ Build/Bid method offers several benefits. It allows the owner to solicit competitive bids for Structural Design services from several local independent experienced Structural Engineers. Owners can be in full control of the project by hiring an engineer with the knowhow, experience, flexibility and ingenuity required for strengthening of existing buildings.  The engineer is not tied to the standard “cookie cutter” D/B practices and can select the most cost effective method of retrofitting.

Usually an experienced engineer can then help the owner to get the idea of approximate future construction in the early phases of the design.  While this is not exact and will have to be confirmed by the construction bids, it will give an owner a good idea of projected costs early on. When the design is completed and approved by the building department, the engineer will usually assist the owner to get bids for construction based on the approved design from several local general contractors with proven experience of seismic retrofitting work.  This avoids the conflict of interest and allows an Engineer to represent the interests of the client, not the contractor.  Further, the when the contractor is selected the Engineer will provide Structural Inspections to make sure that the contractor follows the drawings and the owners get what  they paid for.

Most serious structural engineering companies carry E&O insurance. E&O insurance in combination with the contractor Commercial Liability insurance provides an additional level of protection for the owner in unlikely event of anything goes wrong.

Choosing an Engineer

If the concerns outlined above lead the owner to select a traditional Design/Bid/Built method, the most important first step is to select the right engineer for the project.  The following are some additional considerations the owners may want to take into account while selecting an Engineer:

Most people wouldn’t consider having their family doctor perform a heart transplant, they would choose a specialist.  Similarly specialized seismic retrofitting work warranties the services of a California licensed Structural Engineer for seismic strengthening of your building.  In order to become a licensed Structural Engineer in California, one needs to gain required experience under supervision of a Structural Engineer, pass a National 16 hour Structural Engineer exam, and an 8 hour California Seismic SE exam.  With the passing rate around 25%, it is clear that complex seismic engineering is better understood by licensed Structural Engineers.  While some experienced civil engineers do quality seismic design work, by simply considering Structural Engineers who have proven experience of seismic upgrade work, the owner will ensure higher level of competency and code compliant design.

Consider hiring an Engineer who carries Professional Liability Insurance and ask about the limit of their coverage. Enginious Structures carries $1M in E&O and $5M in Commercial Liability Insurance.  While we have never had to use it, it offers our clients an additional level of protection.

Hire a structural engineering company that is local and has been around for a while and will continue to do so. The last thing you want if there is an issue down the road is an engineer that closed shop and moved on to bigger and better things.

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All members of Berkeley’s city council agreed to start working on a phase two ordinance mandating retrofit of remaining 203 unretrofitted soft story buildings.

More than 14,000 Berkeley residents could be displaced if a major earthquake hits the Hayward fault line. People that will be mostly affected are those living in soft story buildings, which are structures vulnerable to collapse during an earthquake. There are 269 buildings identified as soft story buildings in Berkeley and only 66 owners have retrofitted their buildings on their own. The remaining 203 have either submitted a plan or done nothing at all; that is why in the 4×4 Joint Committee on Housing meeting, Berkeley City Council members and Rent Stabilization agreed to start working on a phase two ordinance mandating retrofit of remaining unretrofitted soft story building..

For additional information see the link the Daily Planet Article below:

City Council considers retrofits for earthquake-prone buildings

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East Bay Earthquake Preparedness

Click the link below to view a map of soft story buildings in Oakland along with other earthquake information relevant to the East Bay.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/inoakland/detail?entry_id=96071

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Voluntary San Francisco Seismic Retrofit Is Faster and Cheaper If Done Now

“If you own a soft-story building, it may be advantageous for you to take voluntary measures that will save you a considerable amount of money in the end. Owners of pre-1973 soft story buildings can sign up for voluntary retrofitting and get their building permit expedited and fees waived. Being pro-active may also help you to be exempt from future stricter standards.”

http://blog.863katy.com/2011/05/soft-story-retrofit-now-mandatory/

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What did we learn from the SF voluntary soft story ordinance – Voluntary programs don’t work!

According to the city records almost a year after San Francisco passed a voluntary program to encourage property owners to retrofit their soft-story building, only 26 owners out of estimated 25,000 potential soft story buildings in San Francisco have taken advantage of the breaks in plan review and permit fees the city has offered in return. This is not surprising. While these breaks can amount to hundreds, possibly even thousands of dollars depending on the size of the projects, they are dwarfed by the costs of the actual strengthening.

In the past, the city leader tried to pass the mandatory ordinance.  However, the plans were put on the back burner when the funding ideas didn’t pan out.  But it looks like they are trying to give it another go.  At a soft-story hearing last month, Supervisor Scott Wiener admitted the failure of the voluntary program and supported the idea of a mandate.

Read more at the San Francisco Examiner: http://www.sfexaminer.com/local/2011/04/fewer-participating-soft-story-retrofit-program#ixzz1LLEpUVLk

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Best Wishes to Japan

Our hearts and minds are with the Japanese people as they continue to deal with the aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami. We are in awe of the resilience they have shown and wish them a better and brighter future.

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