Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Quickie: That Fortress Embassy in Haiti Stood Up to Quake's Shaking




Debra K. Rubin in last week’s issue of the Engineering News Record wrote about the US Embassy in Port-au Prince that withstood the recent earthquake:  U.S. Embassy in Haiti Stood Up to Quake's Shaking. Excerpt below: 
The U.S. embassy in Haiti is one of the rare significant structures in Port-au-Prince to have survived the Jan. 12, 7.0 magnitude earthquake with only minor damage, none of it structural.
As a result, the embassy has become an important base for several relief efforts. The embassy is a relatively new structure. It was built as a design-build project by Fluor Corp., as part of the U.S. State Dept’s overhaul of its global facilities. Construction started on the 134,000 sq-ft office building with its 54,874 sq ft of support structures in early 2005 and was completed in 2008 at a cost of $109 million.

As with all new diplomatic facilities, the State Department’s Bureau of Overseas Building Operations specified the embassy be engineered to adhere to the International Building Code and also to an OBO specific code supplement. The supplement covers site-specific design requirements for each location where U.S. posts are built.

The supplement also details building design requirements including gravity, snow, wind, and earthquake loads, as well as blast protection.

Rod Evans, OBO’s embassy project director, says the preferred earthquake-resisting system, to include the one used in Port-au-Prince, is reinforced concrete shear walls. All other building systems, including mechanical, electrical and fire protection, must also be constructed to withstand the stresses of an earthquake.

The embassy in Port-au-Prince was designed for “high” seismic design criteria as well as wind loading of 45 meters/sec (100 miles per hour).

Read the whole thing here.

TSB over at The Skeptical Bureaucrat has also posted an item about the new embassy complex in PaP which was completed in March 2008:  

"U.S. Mission in Haiti is fortunate to have moved into a new office complex last year, a nice seismically-resistant one with lots of infrastructure support, independent electrical power and water treatment, and which is located close to the airport. The old embassy was a rickety little structure and was way too close to the now-devastated center of Port-au-Prince; in fact, it was only eight blocks from the National Palace that collapsed."





2 comments:

Consul-At-Arms said...

Having a "fortress embassy" isn't all bad.

I've linked back to you here: http://consul-at-arms2.blogspot.com/2010/02/re-quickie-that-fortress-embassy-in.html

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the comment and the link, CAA!