The Utah Capitol could be riding the next big earthquake like a ship at sea after engineers hoist the 67,500-ton marble building and drop it on a set of shock absorbers.
They can only hope to get it done in time. Salt Lake City is due for a major earthquake that could knock the Capitol dome off its precarious perch, snap marble columns and collapse upper floors.
For a 59-member team of architects, engineers, construction and historic preservation managers, shoring up the four-story Capitol is a race against time. The digging will start in December 2004, and the work will last four years.
"If people can walk out alive, that's the objective we're after," says Jerod Johnson, a structural engineer for the Salt Lake-based Reaveley firm, among 14 companies participating in the Capitol's $200 million restoration.
Together with Forell/Elsesser Engineers of San Francisco, the Reaveley group has the delicate task of hydraulically lifting the entire Capitol, a marble-and-concrete statehouse built with almost no reinforcing steel.
Engineers have a word for it: brittle.
The firms also are designing a set of internal walls that will let the Capitol sway at the foundation while keeping its upper half from snapping off. Forell/Elsesser retrofitted city halls for San Francisco, Oakland and Pasadena against California earthquakes. Salt Lake's City-County building also has been retrofitted to resist earthquake damage.
Utah's Capitol is doomed without a suspension system, engineers say. Although Utah's worst earthquakes are infrequent, separated by hundreds of years, the record shows them to be fairly regular — and particularly violent. In an instant they can raise the Wasatch mountains 10 feet and drop the valley by five. A big earthquake will cause widespread damage to older buildings and homes made of unreinforced brick, and snap water and gas lines.
The clock is different for each of dozens of active bedrock faults ensnaring Utah's heavily populated Wasatch corridor. But by some measures the kind of 7.3 Richter earthquake that the Capitol will be designed to withstand is a century overdue. More distant quakes, powerful enough, could collapse the 89-year-old building.
"We're expecting the next earthquake to hit anytime between now and 25 years from now," says David Hart, executive director for the Capitol Preservation Board.
Only gravity is holding up Utah's statehouse, which for 89 years has been waiting to crumble like a Roman ruin. The occupants — Gov. Mike Leavitt and his executive staff, the treasurer and other state officers plus a part-time Legislature — can only hope to get out in time.
"The Big One is of a lot of interest," said Gary Christenson of the Utah Geological Survey. "We don't like to use the word overdue, but it could occur anytime."
The Capitol will be emptied by December 2004, making just as untimely any earthquake that hits over two years while the building is suspended for a new foundation. That will make it especially prone to collapse.
The Capitol could reopen for business as soon as January 2008. Lawmakers will work in a pair of $45 million office wings being built by Salt Lake's Jacobsen Construction Inc., lead contractor for the Capitol restoration.
The odds of a major quake have the Capitol Preservation Board kick-starting the Capitol project on a $10 million advance from the Legislature. The retrofit is so complex lawmakers had to consider tearing down their Capitol and starting over.
But engineers said it could be reliably fixed for about $200 million, including extensive renovations.
Estimates for a new Capitol, matching every Gothic detail, ran to $800 million, and rebuilding wasn't going to be easy. The Georgia mill that originally carved Utah's 30-foot solid-marble columns wrecked the only machinery capable of shaping the columns.
That and other logistical challenges forced officials to think renovation instead of rebuilding.
The engineers are shopping for a set of base isolators, which are rubber-and-steel mounts about 4 feet wide. They plan to use 280 of the mounts to support a steel and concrete grid holding up the Capitol — a new chassis that will let the building pitch and slide 2 feet in any direction.
In a feared earthquake the ground will abruptly move first, then the Capitol will slowly catch up, swaying this way and that. It's still likely to rain debris, sending occupants under desks.
The quake may last only 30 seconds, but it probably will come without any warning. On the Wasatch bench where the Capitol sits, the shaking will be more violent than on the basin floor.