Mayor: Limit in building height depends on soil test
>> Tuesday, July 30, 2013
By Dexter A.
See
BAGUIO
CITY – Mayor Mauricio G. Domogan said limiting the height of buildings here is
not the solution in reducing casualties and damage to properties during strong
earthquakes.
While there were earlier plans to limit
the height of buildings to be constructed in the city to only four stories, the
local chief executive said the same is not a business friendly policy, thus,
the city government adopted as a policy the conduct of the needed soil tests to
ascertain the carrying capacity of the area where the structure will be
constructed which resulted to the existence of numerous high rise structures in
the different parts of the city.
“Owners
of high rise buildings simply need to comply with the prescribed mitigating
measures aside from ensuring the overall quality of their respective structures
in order to withstand the strong earthquakes that will hit our city in the
future,” Domogan stressed, citing that the city government is now imposing as a
requirement the conduct of the mandatory soil tests to the construction of
buildings that are more than two stories to ensure the stability of the
structures that will be erected.
According
to him, the numerous studies conducted by experts on why many of the high rise
structures in the city collapsed during the occurrence of the intensity 7.9
killer earthquake on July 16, 1996 show that there were defects in the
construction of the buildings and the alleged violations in the building
permits issued to the owners of the affected structures.
He
said foreign experts also came to the city to study why the buildings of the
St. Louis University (SLU) did not collapse during the trembler and found out
that the construction method used was in accordance to what is suitable for the
prevailing situation in the city.
Among
the famous structures that collapsed at the height of the July 1990 killer
earthquake were the Hyatt Terraces Hotel, Nevada Hotel, Hilltop Hotel, Baguio
Park Hotel, University of Baguio accountancy building and the Royal Inn which
were located at the heart of the city.
Earlier,
the Philippine chamber of Commerce and Industry (PCCI) Baguio-Benguet Chapter,
the Chamber of Real Estate Builders Association (CREBA) and local housing
developers petitioned the city government to allow the construction of high
rise structures provided that the area where their buildings will be located
pass the required soil tests coupled with the implementation of additional
mitigating measures that will be required by the city building official to
guarantee the safety of the public.
Domogan
said the local government will strictly implement the rules and regulations
governing the construction of buildings, particularly the provisions of the
National Building code, other allied laws and local ordinances relative thereto
in order to ensure the safety of the occupants of the structures to be
constructed in the different parts of the city.
He
claimed those who plan to build high rise buildings must consult local
construction experts who are aware of the situation in the city in order for
them to be able to ascertain the appropriate construction method to be used to
guarantee the soundness of the structure to be built.
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