BBC News Jan 15, 2010
By Ayesha Bhatty, BBC News, London
Experts say it is no surprise that shoddy construction contributed
to the level of destruction in Haiti following Tuesday's earthquake.
But the scale of the disaster has shed new light on the problem in the
impoverished Caribbean nation.
Tens of thousands are feared
dead after being crushed by buildings that collapsed. Scores more remain
trapped under the rubble.
"It's sub-standard construction," says
London-based architect John McAslan, who has been working on a project
linked to the Clinton Global Initiative in the country.
"There
aren't any building codes as we would recognise them," he added.
Mr
McAslan says most buildings are made of masonry - bricks or
construction blocks - which tend to perform badly in an earthquake.
Cheap concrete
There are also significant problems with the quality of building
materials used, says Peter Haas, head of the Appropriate Infrastructure
Development Group, a US-based non-profit group that has been working in
Haiti since 2006.
"People are skimping on cement to try to cut
costs, putting a lot of water in, building too thin, and you end up with
a structure that's innately weaker," said Mr Haas, who was on his way
to Haiti to help assess the safety of damaged buildings.
"Concrete
blocks are being made in people's backyards and dried out in the sun,"
he said.
Mr Haas said there were also "serious problems" with the
enforcement of building codes in Haiti.
He said the government
did not function at all in several parts of the country, and many
communities lacked basic services such as electricity, sanitation
services or access to clean water.
"So the problem of code
enforcement is low down on the list," he said.
Poor record
Even
before the quake, Haiti's building safety record was poor.
Almost
100 people - mostly children - died when two schools collapsed within
days of each other in November 2008. At the time, Haitian authorities
blamed poor construction for the accidents.
Roger Musson, head of
seismic hazard at the British Geological Survey, said he was "not at
all" surprised at the level of destruction in Haiti.
He said Haiti, the poorest country in the western hemisphere, was not
used to dealing with earthquakes of this magnitude.
Tuesday's
quake was the worst in two centuries. The country is more used to
dealing with hurricanes, which have been getting more frequent in recent
years, according to Mr Musson.
"Most buildings are like a house
of cards," he said. "They can stand up to the forces of gravity, but if
you have a sideways movement, it all comes tumbling down."
Ironically,
people living in the shanty towns might have had a better chance of
survival than those trapped under concrete buildings, many of which
"pancaked".
"A simple shack's collapse is likely to cause less
damage to human safety than a multi-floor building that collapses," Mr
McAslan said.
Aftershocks
Mr McAslan says it is more
complex and expensive to earthquake-proof a building than equip it for
hurricane damage.
"The priorities have inevitably been elsewhere,
but I'm absolutely certain that the attention of the government will be
to build back better."
He said the main task for the authorities
now was to save as many lives as possible, then to stabilise damaged
buildings so they could withstand any aftershocks, and finally, to
assess how to create buildings that could reasonably withstand another
earthquake.
According to Mr McAslan, the extent of deforestation
in Haiti also contributed to devastation.
He said that on the
hillsides of Petionville, a suburb east of Port-au-Prince, buildings
simply "collapsed and collapsed and collapsed" on to each other as there
was no forest to protect them.
According to the US Geological
Survey, the loss of life from earthquakes is typically 10 times higher
in developing countries than the West and the damage can be up to 100
times worse.
Original article available at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8460042.stm
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