Retrofit brings a home up to current safety codes and significantly reduces
the damage it will sustain during an earthquake.
 
Houses that are not secured properly may collapse or shake off of their
foundations in a major earthquake, rendering them both unlivable and unsafe in
the aftermath of a disaster.
If a house is severely damaged, a family may be prevented from entering it even to claim
possessions.
 
95% of houses that have been shaken from their foundations during an
earthquake have to be demolished.
Potential damages to a house not up to code in an earthquake are
many times as expensive as the cost of retrofit.
Loans for home retrofit are relatively easy to get and are often offered at a
reduced interest rate.
(See our financing link.)
 
Earthquake insurance is not adequate protection against a severe quake.
Insurance does nothing to keep you safe during the earthquake itself and may not
provide for interim housing while your home is being repaired after the quake.
 
Deductables for earthquake insurance policies can be as much as 10% of the
house's value--$30,000 for a $300,000 home.
 
A homeowner whose house has been wrecked by an earthquake
must continue to make mortgage payments whether the home is habitable or not.
Accomodations for people who have lost their homes in an area severely impacted by an
earthquake are usually limited to schools, community centers, churches and tents.
Of the 300,000 people
displaced in Turkey by the massive August 1999 quake, more than 30,000 were still living
in tents after a year.
 
The devastating 1999 earthquake in Turkey was so devastating because
most houses had not been brought up to the national safety standard. The houses that
were up to code sustained only minor damage.
 
No
one should risk losing their house and home to an earthquake.
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A house that has been jolted from its foundation

A house damaged in a quake

Collapsed apartment in 1999 Marmara, Turkey earthquake
(photo Michel Bruneau, MCEER)

Another building destroyed in Turkey quake
(photo Michel Bruneau, MCEER)
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More than
250,000 homes in King County do not meet current earthquake safety codes.
In an area that is at a high risk for earthquakes, retrofit will protect a house from the
most serious potential damage, and is