South
of Downtown, Seattle |
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Fill settlements of about 1 cm were typically
observed in the Pioneer Square area of Seattle. Fill settlement at the
Seattle Fire Dept. headquarters building is shown above.
(N47.5998° W122.3318°; 03/02/2001)
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Sand ejecta along edge of foundation in
south Seattle, along 4th St..
(N47.5833° W122.3294°; 03/03/2001)
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Sand slurry inundated the basement of
this warehouse located on Hanford St. between 1st. Ave. and Occidental
Ave. The perimeter wall appeared to have buckled inward.
(N47.5752° W122.3336°; 03/03/2001)
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Inspection of the perimeter wall along
Occidental Ave. revealed cracks on the ground surface and outward displacement
of the top of the wall of 2 cm to 3 cm.
(N47.5752° W122.3336°; 03/03/2001)
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5 cm to 7 cm settlement of the sidewalk
surrounding this 4-story building located on 1st. Ave. in south Seattle
(N47.5820° W122.3334°; 03/03/2001)
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4 of the garage slabs of the 8-foot deep
basement at the location shown to the left, heaved 2 to 3 feet. The garage
was also inundated as a result of the breakage of the 4-inch pipe that
provides water to the building. Although initially yellow tagged, this
building was fully operational 2 days after the earthquake.
(N47.5820° W122.3334°; 03/03/2001)
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Structural damage of red-tagged masonry
building in South Seattle.
(N47.5838° W122.3339°; 03/04/2001)
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At NE corner of building shown to the
left, the grade beam cracked (~4.5 cm opening with 1.5 cm of vertical offset)
and damaged column and wall that it supported.
(N47.5838° W122.3339°; 03/04/2001)
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These four buildings all showed different
levels of performance. Building D, on the left of the photo, shows
signs of long term settlements to the north (to the left in the photo).
The second building from the left, building C, had a number of sandboils
in the basement area and differential settlements of a addition at the
rear of the building. Buildings A and B and the building barely visible
on the right experienced partial collapse at the rear of the buildings.
Differential settlements between the buildings and the adjacent sidewalks
varied from less than 0.5 cm at the right hand side of the photo to more
than 10 cm at the doorway to building C.
(N47.57722° W122.33385°; 910 03/03/01)
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This sand boil in the basement of building
C measured approximately 2 m in diameter. This sand boil was
typical of six other similar sandboils in the basement.
(N47.57728° W122.33329°; 1601
03/02/01)
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The basement of building C, located on
1st Ave. was covered by approximately 2 feet of sand that ejected from
sand boils. The building is supported on piles.
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Particle size analysis test performed
on the ejected soil found in the basement shown to the above. The soil
classifies as SP (Poorly graded fine sand) according to the USCS.
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The concrete block addition at the rear
of building C, which is believed to be on spread footings, has undergone
significant differential settlements with respect to the original building.
The distance between the jamb and the top of the door was measured to be
12.7 cm.
(N47.57728° W122.33329°; 1601
03/02/01)
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This image is of a piece of metal flashing
between buildings B and C. The flashing is attached to building C
and was nailed into the masonry of B. Differential settlement allowed
the nail to pull through the flashing. The measured offset between
the nail and the hole in the flashing was approximately 4 cm. Roofing
material for building B was also attached to the C building. The
roofing was also torn in tension and showed similar relative settlements.
(N47.57718 W122.33344; 913 03/03/01).
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A view from the back of the collapse experienced
by buildings A and B. Approximately 3 cm of differential settlement was
observed across the 16 m-long basement grade beam. However, most damage
appears to be due to structural response.
(N47.5769° W122.3336°; 03/02/2001)
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Close-up of the back of building B, located
between 1st. Ave. and Occidental Ave. The sand in the lower left corner
of photo appears to be sand ejecta.
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Particle size analysis tests performed
on the ejected soil found in the basement ramp shown to the left. Both
soil samples classify as SM (Silty fine sand) according to the USCS.
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US
Naval Reserve Center |
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10 cm settlement measured at the northwest
corner of the US Naval Reserve Building No. 10
(03/05/2001)
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View of the settlement observed along
the perimetral concrete walkway of Building No. 27.
(03/05/2001)
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