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Could sticky stucco quash quake damage?

SCIENTISTS have often wondered why so many houses in California remain
standing after an earthquake. But now they think they know why: stucco helps the
buildings stick together. And this weather-resistant coating is very commonly
used in the state.

Researchers at the University of California in San Diego built a simple,
two-storey house鈥攖ypical of 90 per cent of homes in Southern
California鈥攁nd placed it on a hydraulic shake table that simulates
earthquakes. The artificial quakes were equivalent to the 1994 Northridge
earthquake near Los Angeles, which registered 6.7 on the Richter scale and
caused damage worth $20 billion.

鈥淭he first test houses didn鈥檛 have stucco鈥攖hey were just [wooden
framed] skeletons with a plywood shell,鈥 says John Hall of the California
Institute of Technology, manager of the house-shaking project. In these tests,
the top of the house swayed back and forth 12.5 centimetres further than the
bottom. But when it was given an outer skin of stucco鈥攁 plaster made of
dehydrated lime, powdered marble and glue, mounted on a wire mesh鈥攖he top
swayed only 2.5 centimetres, says Hall. In the house, appliances toppled, and
water heaters and shelves fell off the walls. But the structure suffered nothing
worse than a few cracks.

The degree of protection depends on the gap behind the stucco. 鈥淚f it鈥檚
placed far enough away from the wood frame, it allows the wire mesh enough room
to absorb most of the tension when the house shakes,鈥 says Hall. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like
having a protective box of concrete around your house.鈥 The researchers next
plan to find out how old stucco can be repaired to make older buildings less
vulnerable during quakes.

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