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UCLA Engineering Hosts
"Earthquake Shake" Akin to Northridge for Student Seismic
Design Challenge
2006 Pacific Southwest
Regional Conference of the American Society of Civil Engineers
draws students from across SoCal and Southwest
On March 31, an earthquake measuring
magnitude 6.7 on the Richter scale shook student dormitories in
Los Angeles. And if the building architects found the shuddering
eerily reminiscent of 1994’s Northridge temblor, that’s
because the movements from this simulated quake were exactly the
same as that frightening natural disaster.
During the 2006
Pacific Southwest Regional Conference of the American Society
of Civil Engineers (ASCE), students had the chance to test
out their scale-model dormitory buildings against the Northridge
quake — as replicated by the recently completed “Shake
Lab” at the UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and
Applied Science.
The annual student conference, which
ran from March 30 to April 1, was hosted by UCLA Engineering this
year and brought nearly 500 civil engineering undergraduates from
Southern California, Arizona and Nevada to Los Angeles to engage
in tasks that include designing and building an earthquake-safe
building, constructing and racing concrete canoes, and erecting
a model steel bridge.A key highlight of
the conference was the relatively new seismic design challenge
— or “Earthquake Shake” — for which teams
from seven California schools were selected.
UCLA, California Polytechnic State University,
Pomona; California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo;
California State University, Los Angeles; San Diego State University;
University of California, Irvine; and University of California,
San Diego, all had student teams competing in the quake competition.
This year’s seismic design challenge was
to build a three-story, scale-model wood dormitory that meets
specific land size and cost requirements. All of the models were
tested on the shake table with ground motions recorded during
medium and large earthquakes — with the large one this year
mirroring the Northridge quake at its epicenter. The winning building
will be the one that satisfies the pre-set design criteria, falls
within cost parameters and emerges with the least amount of damage
after the “big one” hits, and should be announced
at the end of the conference.
Teams from all of the universities have been preparing
for the challenge since fall 2005. The students have had four
months to complete their designs, from conception to execution.
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