About this course

Many regions of the United States are at risk of experiencing a major earthquake. Fortunately, the property destruction and personal injuries and deaths that might be caused by such an earthquake can be significantly reduced, if known structural and other weaknesses found in many private homes are fixed prior to the occurrence of the quake. This course identifies particular weaknesses and recommends specific, practical methods with which homes can be modified to prevent failure. Ranges of costs for each particular modification are presented. The course material includes pictures of deficient building components and of earthquake damage caused by failure of the components. Safety procedures to be followed during and after an earthquake are also listed. An engineer mastering the material in this course would have an excellent background for making presentations on earthquake preparedness to civic groups, building commissions, juries, insurance companies, homeowners associations, schools, and similar groups.

Topics: Earthquake hazards in the United States Unsecured water heaters Homes not anchored to foundation Weak crawl space walls Pier-and-post foundations Homes built on steep hillsides Unreinforced masonry walls Rooms over garages Unreinforced masonry chimneys Homes with unique designs Natural gas safety Geologic hazards What to do before, during, and after an earthquake. 

Intended Audience: primarily for structural, civil, forensic and construction engineers, and would also be of particular interest to engineers serving as building officials in the military, in government agencies concerned with residential construction practices, and as consultants to insurance companies. 

Publication Source: US Federal Emergency Management Authority

This course includes:
schedule3 hours on-demand content
signal_cellular_altBeginner level
task_altNo preparation required
calendar_todayPublished At Apr 29, 2022
workspace_premiumCertificate of completion
errorNo prerequisites
lock1 year access
calendar_todayUpdated At Jan 3, 2025