Soft-Story Buildings

Soft-story building damage in Loma Prieta earthquake

Some of the most susceptible structures to shaking damage are soft-story apartments and condominiums. A soft-story residential building is one that has open parking or commercial space on the first floor and housing on higher floors built prior to recent codes. In an earthquake, ground shaking causes such structures to sway and sometimes collapse. A soft-story collapse can have particularly disastrous consequences considering that they crush cars and kill people occupying the open areas.

ABAG modeling has shown that, in both a large earthquake on the Hayward or San Andreas faults, two-thirds of the uninhabitable housing units will likely be in soft-story residential buildings.

Building owners: Learn the steps for strengthening your building

Estimates of Number of Soft-Story Buildings in the Region

The following table summarizes the number of buildings identified as having a potential soft-story by various building inventories. The year built, units,and stories indicates the criteria used to estimate the number of buildings. More information about the inventories and soft-story mitigation programs in these cities (and others) can be found below the table.

City/County Total Buildings Total Units Year Built Units Stories
San Francisco 2,800 29,000 < 1973 ≥ 5 ≥ 3
San Francisco (estimated) 4,600 18,400 < 1973 4 ≥ 3
San Francisco (estimated) 3,400 10,200 < 1973 3 ≥ 3
Oakland 1,380 24,273 < 1991 ≥ 5 ≥ 2
Oakland (estimated) 1,060 4,240 <1991 4 ≥ 2
Oakland (estimated) 370 1,110 < 1991 3 ≥ 2
Entire Santa Clara County 2,630 33,119 any any ≥ 4
San Jose (incl. in county total) 1,093 10,923 any any ≥ 4
Berkeley 400 (320 wood-frame) 5,000 < 1995 ≥ 5 ≥ 2
Alameda (estimated) 178 2,623 < 1985 ≥ 5 ≥ 2
Sebastopol 55 unknown < 1990 ≥ 2 ≥ 2


San Francisco

In 2013 San Francisco passed legislation that requires the evaluation and retrofit of “multi-unit soft-story buildings,” defined as: Wood-frame structures, containing five or more residential units, having two or more stories over a “soft” or “weak” story, and permitted for construction prior to January 1, 1978.

San Francisco Earthquake Safety Implementation Program
Mandatory Wood Soft Story Retrofit Ordinance.
The Resilient City – The Dilemma of Existing Buildings, San Francisco Urban Research Center (SPUR)

Oakland
OaklandSoftStory_Income_10092014_icon_250x150

ABAG is working with The City of Oakland to take steps to identify and strengthen soft-story apartment and condo buildings vulnerable to collapse in earthquakes. Past earthquakes have demonstrated that these buildings pose a safety risk to tenants and occupants, a financial risk to owners and risk the recovery of the City and region. In 2008 Oakland surveyed its multi-family buildings with five or more units and in 2009 Oakland passed an ordinance that required the owners of these buildings to complete a simple evaluation of the ground floor. Phase 1 of the project identified and evaluated 1,380 potential soft-story buildings. Phase 2 of the program is underway with the goal of performing engineering evaluations and retrofitting buildings that lack adequate strength to resist shaking. Learn more.

Informational Memo: Safer Housing for Oakland – Retrofit Program for Soft Story Apartment Buildings, October 16, 2014
Phase 1 Report: Soft-Story Housing Improvement Plan for the City of Oakland: Building Screening Phase, October 2014 revision
City of Oakland Ordinance for Mandatory Seismic Screening of Multiple Story Buildings Constructed Prior to 1991, July 2009

Berkeley

The City of Berkeley requires owners of owners of soft, weak or open front (SWOF) buildings with five or more dwelling units to retrofit their buildings. The law took effect January 4, 2014 and applies to wood frame buildings constructed prior to 1978.

City of Berkeley Soft-Story Program
City of Berkeley Inventory Documentation

Santa Clara County (Including San Jose)
Inventory Documentation: Inventory of Soft-First Story Multi-Family Dwellings in Santa Clara County, Collaborative for Disaster Mitigation San Jose State University – Includes numbers of soft-story buildings in each city.
City of San Jose Apartment-Owners Guide to Earthquake Safety

Other Cities
City of Alameda award winning soft-story program
City of Richmond potential soft-story inventory
City of Fremont ordinance 10-2007 Requiring Mandatory Retrofit of Apartments

Cities on the Peninsula between San Francisco and San Jose also tend to have a large number of soft-story buildings. However, no specific numbers are available for any of these communities. These buildings are also common in the denser portions of Marin County than in the other North Bay counties.


Resources
Resilience Policy Guidance Document – Soft Story Retrofit Program Development (2016) New!
Legislation enabling cities and counties to address soft-story buildings in their communities, AB 304 (Hancock, 2005)
Guidelines for Seismic Evaluation and Retrofit of Multi-Unit Wood-Frame Buildings With Weak First Stories, FEMA P-807 / March 2012
Last updated: 04.08.2016