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coobird | 2 years ago

Larger buildings tend to better withstand the large quakes. Building codes have been revamped after large quakes in Japan, so large commercial and public buildings tend to be the safest ones. They also are used for temporary shelter in natural disasters like quakes and heavy rain/typhoons.

Problem are with older wooden houses. There's quite a few photos and videos of older houses that have completely collapsed or their ground floors collapsing.

On a side note, since it's a public holiday, hospitals aren't able to cope with those who are injured because they're lightly staffed, and medical personnel can't reach them due to damaged roads, etc.

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ninjin|2 years ago

> Problem are with older wooden houses. There's quite a few photos and videos of older houses that have completely collapsed or their ground floors collapsing.

Indeed. For those who do not know, new year celebrations in Japan happen from 1 January onwards [1] and usually entails visiting in-laws, parents, and grandparents (or them visiting you), very much akin to Christmas. Thus it may very well be more likely to have families coming over to their parents and grandparents living in older houses on a day like this than any other time of the year.

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_New_Year

ChatGTP|2 years ago

Building codes have been revamped after large quakes in Japan, so large commercial and public buildings tend to be the safest ones.

They've been revamped, but Ishikawa hasn't rebuilt everything to the new codes in the last 40 years or so they were introduced.

It's not a wealthy area.

numpad0|2 years ago

There are ways to upgrade existing buildings that makes more sense in taller buildings than small houses, which of course is government subsidized, so taller buildings in Japan are often safer. Or at least safe for the first one. Some says the exoskeleton approach[1] is ugly as hell, I think it's cyberpunk.

1: https://dailyportalz.jp/kiji/170113198541