Peruvian villagers how to protect adobe buildings from earthquake collapse

Villagers of Chocos during a training that focused on identifying vulnerabilitie

Villagers of Chocos during a training that focused on identifying vulnerabilities of adobe buildings and how to strengthen such buildings to be safe during earthquakes.

Children playing with wooden blocks that were used to represent adobe blocks during the training on earthquake basics and earthquake preparedness for children. (Photo: David Hermoza / Stanford University)

Stanford students and faculty help teach Peruvian villagers to use "geomesh" to retrofit adobe buildings vulnerable to deadly collapse during an earthquake.

"With adobe, it is a deadly combination of extremely poor material, in terms of stability, together with extremely large earthquakes, so the risk is huge."

Some of the highest death tolls from earthquakes worldwide are due to adobe structures collapsing.

The Stanford group partnered with several organizations in Peru, as well as GeoHazards International , a Palo Alto-based nonprofit organization that works around the world to reduce the danger from geologic hazards.

The organizations selected the village of Chocos, about a 7-hour drive from the capital city of Lima over what Stanford graduate student Matt Bussman described as "some pretty death-defying roads."

A principal Peruvian partner was the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru, where researchers have been working on various techniques for strengthening adobe buildings. The school retrofit involved wrapping the walls in sheets of geomesh, a molded plastic grid resembling construction or chain link fencing. Geomesh is commonly used for stabilizing slopes and preventing soil erosion.

Partners in Peru


The design of the retrofit was spearheaded by the partners in Peru. The Stanford students focused on the outreach aspect – how best to teach the villagers the hazard they faced and how to implement the solution. In classes, the students developed teaching tools for use by the volunteers who would go to Chocos in the summer.

The volunteers arrived in June. On their first night in town, they put on a movie night, to introduce themselves and the project to the villagers. Prior to showing the animated Disney film Tangled, they showed some short videos created by the Stanford students, illustrating the danger of adobe construction collapsing during an earthquake.

Using wooden blocks to stand in for adobe bricks, the students had constructed a model building on a tabletop, and then simulated an earthquake by shaking the table until the model collapsed. The next video clip featured two model buildings side by side, but on one the walls had been covered with mosquito netting to simulate the geomesh.

When the table started shaking again, the unreinforced "adobe" building again collapsed. But the "retrofitted" one held up with only some cracks in the walls.

"I can confidently say that video was very effective," said Veronica Cedillos, a Stanford master’s alumna who works for GeoHazards International and managed the Chocos project. As evidence, she cited an interaction with one of the villagers about a week later.

"This little 5-year-old Peruvian boy saw us working on another presentation, pointed to a picture of an adobe building, and said, ’That building, it’s going to fall.’

"And we said, ’Really, how do you know that?’

"And he said, ’It doesn’t have geomesh.’"

Movie night


The whole evening was such a hit that "movie night" became a regular event. And the little boy became an almost daily visitor to the retrofit project headquarters, bringing friends along and asking to see the video again and again.

After some training, the villagers received training in how to do the work and dug in.

The first step was to tear the old roof from the schoolhouse, followed by removing all the old stucco that was plastered over the adobe walls. A trench was dug around the building, where a new concrete foundation would be poured.

After tuckpointing the walls, geomesh was put on.

The workers draped it over the top of the walls and embedded it firmly into the new concrete foundation – just like the mosquito netting in the students’ video.

As work progressed, at each movie night, the Stanford team showed a video explaining the progress that had been made during the week.

By the time the project was complete in August, word had circulated, and the final ceremonies were attended by representatives from several other villages, as well as government officials.

"One of the main goals of this project was to create a model that would be replicated in other villages," said Greg Deierlein , a Stanford professor of civil and environmental engineering involved with the project.

"We think that these relatively modest – in terms of cost – retrofits can make a huge difference in terms of reducing the number of fatalities that would occur from an earthquake that is very possible in this part of Peru."

* * *

The Stanford chapter of Engineers for a Sustainable World and the John A. Blume Earthquake Engineering Center were involved in the project. The school retrofit in Peru is one of several earthquake safety outreach collaborations around the world between the Blume Center and GeoHazards International.

Prisma Ingenieros, an engineering firm in Peru, led the design of the retrofit. Estrategia, a Lima-based nonprofit working to empower women in understanding their rights to land and housing and to promote improvements in poor areas of Peru, also participated in the project.

The principal funders of the project are the Ohya Memorial Fund, the Swiss Reinsurance Company and the Thornton Tomasetti Foundation.

Media


Greg Deierlein, Civil and Environmental Engineering: (650) 723-0453 ggd [a] stanford (p) edu

Eduardo Miranda, Civil and Environmental Engineering: (650) 723-4450, emiranda [a] stanford (p) edu

Louis Bergeron, Stanford News Service: (650) 725-1944, louisb3 [a] stanford (p) edu