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03-23-2020, 11:40 AM #101Registered User
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Mines above Highland and built in 1948. I'm expecting it to be condemned if we get a really big one. I'm sure earthquake retrofitters will be busy this summer, well, if it wasn't for this other bigger natural disaster happening.
I've been earthquake proofing our workshop in the backyard built in the 90's and filling it with supplies. I'm sure when the big one happens the wife will just roll her eyes at the thought of living in the workshop and go to a hotel instead, ha.
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03-23-2020, 11:41 AM #102
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03-23-2020, 12:10 PM #103User
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- Oct 2003
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- Ogden
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I think SLC may be the only Utah city to have the program (fix the bricks), and retrofits aren't cheap. Last I looked, I was told 20-200 a square foot depending on what the engineer came back with.
Pretty good guide here: https://ussc.utah.gov/pages/help.php...+URM+Dwellings
I have a decent amount of anxiety over this, not only is my house URM, but we sleep in the basement, although I think we may at least move upstairs. My wife doesn't share my concern, and she was out of town for the quake last week so didn't get the scare.
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03-23-2020, 12:16 PM #104glocal
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03-23-2020, 12:32 PM #105
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03-23-2020, 12:53 PM #106Registered User
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Last time I checked that grant money is used up already to retro-fit. I think it was 10,000 per house? I'm a few houses outside the border in Millcreek, I have no idea why Millcreek had to be it's own city 4 years back. no google fiber, no grants. Thanks Obama!
That video doesn't represent my house that has wood framing inside and gypsum board instead of drywall, but point taken.
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03-23-2020, 12:57 PM #107User
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03-23-2020, 01:53 PM #108
Stucco can be brick underneath and brick can be a facade, not what holds the building up. Multi-wythe brick or URM is the biggest concern. One way find out is to look in your attic where the rafters meet the joists. If the joist is sitting on top of multiple rows of brick and not timber framing then your house is multi-wythe. A quick rule of thumb can be done using an internet search to cross reference the year a house was built with the standard construction practices for that era.
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03-23-2020, 04:42 PM #109
I knew the grant program existed but not much else about it. I live halfway to Vegas. I've always assumed corruption was involved in the Millcreek Township secession. Sounds like the residents have really benefited from their independence
If that framing isn't designed to be structural it's just a convenient place to hang stuff.
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03-24-2020, 10:41 AM #110
I took a walk around my Sugarhouse 1914 pile of bricks yesterday to look for new cracks. Spotted a couple of very thin fractures about 2' long which I had never noticed before (had a mason tuckpoint most of the existing cracks 3 years ago while he was rebuilding the chimney so the stale was clean). They run vertically and go through mortar and brick indiscriminately which is new to me, the previous cracks all zigzagged along the mortar and never went through the bricks. Those are from the house slowly settling with the front going faster than the back though.
There were no visible cracks in the lath and plaster inside. I'm counting this as a major win.
Ms Boissal is still a bit PTSDed by the whole thing, she actually called me after the last 4.1 aftershock. That's a sign that she's seriously bothered, getting that girl to talk on the phone is no small feat.
I almost pissed myself laughing yesterday when the PS4 controller that was hiding on the couch next to her randomly vibrated. She jumped 4' in the air and was ready to bolt for the door within 1/10th of a second.
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03-26-2020, 10:02 AM #111
Your story brings back nervous memories of me and Mrs. Galibier - having moved to San Francisco three days before the 7.1 in 1989.
I think it was 2 weeks before we stopped sleeping fully dressed, and every aftershock (for the next 6 months) dumped a load of adrenaline into our system.
... ThomGalibier Designcrafting technology in service of music
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03-26-2020, 10:31 AM #112Registered User
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That aftershock 10 minutes ago was a nice shudder at work. Centered near the airport. Only a 3.3, but I don't know how you Californians deal with this shit.
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03-26-2020, 10:47 AM #113yelgatgab
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Smugly?
Remind me. We'll send him a red cap and a Speedo.
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03-26-2020, 10:51 AM #114
I would think that knowing when a bad event like flooding/tornado/virus is coming is worse than a (short) sharp shock.
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03-26-2020, 11:34 AM #115
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03-26-2020, 12:25 PM #116Registered User
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03-26-2020, 01:32 PM #117
I lived in Santiago Chile for a while when I was younger, like 22, and my roommates and I all slept through a 6.3 quake cause we were HAMMERED. We had broken plates in the kitchen and stuff in the afternoon when we woke up. We thought we had just trashed the apartment partying, We didn't know about the earthquake until someone came over and flipped the tv over to the news, and we were like, "oh shit."
sent from Utah.sigless.
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03-26-2020, 01:47 PM #118
^^^That's an awesome story.
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03-26-2020, 02:38 PM #119
Within 20 seconds of this morning's quake I got a text from Ms Boissal telling me that her whole building wobbled. She works on the 14th floor so I'm sure it's not particularly reassuring. I was on the skinner huffing and puffing and didn't notice shit other. Unless the quake caused one of the trees to drop snow on my head but that happens regardless...
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03-26-2020, 04:19 PM #120
I missed the last one today cant feel or hear em on the forklift
goin marion moskows on the rocks tonight
if we gits another tornado this summer im outta here"When the child was a child it waited patiently for the first snow and it still does"- Van "The Man" Morrison
"I find I have already had my reward, in the doing of the thing" - Buzz Holmstrom
"THIS IS WHAT WE DO"-AML -ski on in eternal peace
"I have posted in here but haven't read it carefully with my trusty PoliAsshat antenna on."-DipshitDanno
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