- This topic has 25 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 9 months ago by ocrenter.
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February 10, 2011 at 8:23 AM #18504February 10, 2011 at 10:17 AM #664264UCGalParticipant
Are you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.
February 10, 2011 at 10:17 AM #664326UCGalParticipantAre you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.
February 10, 2011 at 10:17 AM #665404UCGalParticipantAre you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.
February 10, 2011 at 10:17 AM #664931UCGalParticipantAre you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.
February 10, 2011 at 10:17 AM #665068UCGalParticipantAre you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.
February 10, 2011 at 3:15 PM #664444xtinaParticipantThanks UCGal for the wonderful link!
Since I am currently hunting, I will be able to reference your link to figure out seismic danger! I’m at a low-moderate risk area.
Someone also posted a link to the fire hazard zones before (whom, I forgot). That basically showed the entire area I am hunting in a scarlet ultimate-fire-hazard-zone red.
February 10, 2011 at 3:15 PM #664506xtinaParticipantThanks UCGal for the wonderful link!
Since I am currently hunting, I will be able to reference your link to figure out seismic danger! I’m at a low-moderate risk area.
Someone also posted a link to the fire hazard zones before (whom, I forgot). That basically showed the entire area I am hunting in a scarlet ultimate-fire-hazard-zone red.
February 10, 2011 at 3:15 PM #665583xtinaParticipantThanks UCGal for the wonderful link!
Since I am currently hunting, I will be able to reference your link to figure out seismic danger! I’m at a low-moderate risk area.
Someone also posted a link to the fire hazard zones before (whom, I forgot). That basically showed the entire area I am hunting in a scarlet ultimate-fire-hazard-zone red.
February 10, 2011 at 3:15 PM #665110xtinaParticipantThanks UCGal for the wonderful link!
Since I am currently hunting, I will be able to reference your link to figure out seismic danger! I’m at a low-moderate risk area.
Someone also posted a link to the fire hazard zones before (whom, I forgot). That basically showed the entire area I am hunting in a scarlet ultimate-fire-hazard-zone red.
February 10, 2011 at 3:15 PM #665247xtinaParticipantThanks UCGal for the wonderful link!
Since I am currently hunting, I will be able to reference your link to figure out seismic danger! I’m at a low-moderate risk area.
Someone also posted a link to the fire hazard zones before (whom, I forgot). That basically showed the entire area I am hunting in a scarlet ultimate-fire-hazard-zone red.
February 11, 2011 at 6:21 AM #665266ocrenterParticipant[quote=UCGal]Are you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.[/quote]
that’s interesting.
there are two issues when it comes to earthquake. immediate safety and post-event structural stability.
obviously what he did on your house significantly improved the immediate safety issue. And I would assume most homes in SD that’s built within the last 30 years will likely do just fine in regard to immediate safety.
but the ultimate question is what happens if there is structural problems following the event. are you saying chances of structural related issues will be almost nil if there is the type of “seismic retrofit” or if the home is relatively new?
there’s no question SD compared to the rest of SoCal is relatively safer given our distance to San Andreas, which is probably why the earthquake insurance is more of a question then a necessity. but in the back of my mind I do fear a catastrophic event that does end up causing structural damage, despite relative distance to any fault and the city label of “low to moderate risk.” is that just paranoia?
February 11, 2011 at 6:21 AM #665741ocrenterParticipant[quote=UCGal]Are you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.[/quote]
that’s interesting.
there are two issues when it comes to earthquake. immediate safety and post-event structural stability.
obviously what he did on your house significantly improved the immediate safety issue. And I would assume most homes in SD that’s built within the last 30 years will likely do just fine in regard to immediate safety.
but the ultimate question is what happens if there is structural problems following the event. are you saying chances of structural related issues will be almost nil if there is the type of “seismic retrofit” or if the home is relatively new?
there’s no question SD compared to the rest of SoCal is relatively safer given our distance to San Andreas, which is probably why the earthquake insurance is more of a question then a necessity. but in the back of my mind I do fear a catastrophic event that does end up causing structural damage, despite relative distance to any fault and the city label of “low to moderate risk.” is that just paranoia?
February 11, 2011 at 6:21 AM #665403ocrenterParticipant[quote=UCGal]Are you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.[/quote]
that’s interesting.
there are two issues when it comes to earthquake. immediate safety and post-event structural stability.
obviously what he did on your house significantly improved the immediate safety issue. And I would assume most homes in SD that’s built within the last 30 years will likely do just fine in regard to immediate safety.
but the ultimate question is what happens if there is structural problems following the event. are you saying chances of structural related issues will be almost nil if there is the type of “seismic retrofit” or if the home is relatively new?
there’s no question SD compared to the rest of SoCal is relatively safer given our distance to San Andreas, which is probably why the earthquake insurance is more of a question then a necessity. but in the back of my mind I do fear a catastrophic event that does end up causing structural damage, despite relative distance to any fault and the city label of “low to moderate risk.” is that just paranoia?
February 11, 2011 at 6:21 AM #664665ocrenterParticipant[quote=UCGal]Are you in the bottom of a canyon, or top of a mesa? If you’re at a high point, flood insurance seems pointless.
As far as earthquake insurance… more info is needed. What year was the house built? Building standards have changed through the years – but most of the earthquake standards were in place form the mid 80’s on.
And, how close are you to fault lines.
http://www.sandiego.gov/development-services/hazards/hazardsmaps.shtmlFWIW – we live on a mesa above a canyon and don’t have flood insurance. And since my husband did his “seismic retrofit” to our early 60’s house, we canceled the earthquake insurance. (He added sheer walls, increased foundation bolts and strapping between 1st/2nd floor, added diagonal bracing… brought it up to better than current code.) He did all this because we’re pretty close to the Rose Canyon fault.[/quote]
that’s interesting.
there are two issues when it comes to earthquake. immediate safety and post-event structural stability.
obviously what he did on your house significantly improved the immediate safety issue. And I would assume most homes in SD that’s built within the last 30 years will likely do just fine in regard to immediate safety.
but the ultimate question is what happens if there is structural problems following the event. are you saying chances of structural related issues will be almost nil if there is the type of “seismic retrofit” or if the home is relatively new?
there’s no question SD compared to the rest of SoCal is relatively safer given our distance to San Andreas, which is probably why the earthquake insurance is more of a question then a necessity. but in the back of my mind I do fear a catastrophic event that does end up causing structural damage, despite relative distance to any fault and the city label of “low to moderate risk.” is that just paranoia?
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