U.S. Structural Engineers Report on China Earthquake Devastation
SICHUAN, China, May 19 /PRNewswire/ -- Structural engineers from Miyamoto
International and Global Risk Miyamoto (GRM), dispatched to China to assess
damage caused by last Monday's M7.9 earthquake, are reporting on their
findings. Observations and data identifying significant causes to structural
failures and successes are being posted daily on
http://www.miyamotointernational.com.
The reconnaissance team arrived in China to overwhelming devastation. In
this excerpt, Kit Miyamoto writes, "We witnessed a pile of rubble which was
Juyuan Middle School and housed 1,000 students. Seven-hundred kids died here
and 20 are still missing. The collapsed building is constructed of
non-ductile cast-in-place concrete columns and beams, and precasted concrete
floor planks. This school was built in 1996; which is relatively modern.
However, the non-ductile detailing of concrete elements and unreinforced
masonry turned out to be killers."
Thus far, this earthquake is being blamed for 50,000 deaths, 245,000
injured, 4.8 million refugees and economic losses exceeding $10 billion USD.
As the team continues to travel throughout the affected region and gather
vital data, new postings and photos will be uploaded to the site.
Miyamoto International provides structural, earthquake and wind
engineering services related to the design and strengthening of buildings.
Projects sectors include: seismic evaluation and retrofit, education,
commercial, civic, corporate, healthcare, and infrastructure. With five
offices in California, one in the Portland-Vancouver Area and one in Tokyo,
Japan, Miyamoto International is one of the largest and fastest growing
structural engineering firms.
Global Risk Miyamoto (GRM) is a joint venture formed by Global Risk
Consultants, the worldwide leader in unbundled property loss control, and
Miyamoto International, one of the largest structural engineering firms in
California. The company was formed specifically to provide the risk
management community with accurately quantified site-specific risk
identification and loss expectancies resulting from natural hazard perils such
as earthquakes, windstorms, hurricanes, typhoons, and floods.
For more information contact:
Kit Miyamoto Tom Chan
Miyamoto International, Inc. Global Risk Miyamoto, LLC.
(916) 373-1995 (925) 284-3700 x111
http://www.miyamotointernational.com http://www.GRMcat.com
SOURCE Miyamoto International, Inc.
Kit Miyamoto of Miyamoto International, Inc., +1-916-373-1995; or Tom Chan of
Global Risk Miyamoto, LLC., +1-925-284-3700, ext, 111
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