THIS DAY IN HISTORY – Earthquake rocks Los Angeles – 1994

Via History.com

On January 17, 1994, an earthquake rocks Los Angeles, California, killing 54 people and causing billions of dollars in damages. The Northridge quake (named after the San Fernando Valley community near the epicenter) was one of the most damaging in U.S. history.

It was 4:31 a.m. when the 6.7-magnitude quake struck the San Fernando Valley, a densely populated area of Los Angeles located 20 miles northeast of the city’s downtown. With an epicenter 12 miles beneath the earth’s surface, the earthquake caused the collapse of several apartment buildings. At the Northridge Meadows complex, 16 people died, all of whom lived on the first floor, when the weak stucco structure fell down on them as they slept.

Given the strength and location of the earthquake, it was fortunate that the death toll was not far higher. Two key factors were critical in reducing the casualties. First, the quake struck in the middle of the night while nearly everyone was at home in their beds. A mall parking lot in the Valley collapsed, but no one was killed because it was entirely empty. Several highways also suffered critical failures, but only one police officer died, when his vehicle plunged off an overpass. The other key factor was that the city’s building and safety codes were strengthened following the 1971 Sylmar quake that collapsed the San Fernando Veterans Hospital. Every building constructed after the new regulations were implemented stayed intact.

Still, the quake caused a huge amount of property damage over a wide area, especially in the beach community of Santa Monica, even though it was relatively far from the epicenter. As much of Santa Monica stands on soil that is less solid than bedrock, it suffered severe ground movement during the earthquake. The partial collapse of the Santa Monica freeway snarled traffic in Los Angeles for months. All told, it is estimated that the earthquake was responsible for $20 billion in damages.

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1 Comment
MrLiberty
MrLiberty
January 17, 2020 11:25 am

My mom was without water for 5 days because the main feeder pipe to the west end of the S.F. Valley broke during this earthquake. Also, her house sustained considerable cosmetic (thankfully not structural) damage. She was about 9 miles from the epicenter. Living about 50 miles from the epicenter, we were awakened, and my first thought was that if it was close, it wasn’t all that bad, but if far away, it was huge. Obviously the second guess was correct. So happy to not be living there anymore. My first quake was the Sylmar one in ’71. Still prefer them to tornadoes however. Your stuff ends up in a pile if the worse happens with an earthquake, rather than miles away with a tornado.