OLIVE VIEW HOSPITAL-San Fernando Earthquake 1971 PDF
OLIVE VIEW HOSPITAL-San Fernando Earthquake 1971 PDF
OLIVE VIEW HOSPITAL-San Fernando Earthquake 1971 PDF
Most of the buildings at the Los Angeles County–owned, 880-bed hospital complex had been
built before the adoption of new construction techniques that had been put in place after the 1933
Long Beach earthquake. The group of one-story structures 300 feet west of the new facility, and
some other buildings, were not damaged. The damaged buildings variously were wood-frame
and masonry structures. The six-story, reinforced-concrete Medical Treatment and Care Building
was one of three new additions to the complex (all three of which sustained damage), was
assembled with earthquake-resistant construction techniques. The hospital was staffed by 98
employees and had 606 patients at the time of the earthquake; all three deaths that occurred at the
Olive View complex were in this building. Two were due to power failure of life-support
systems and one, that of an employee who was struck by part of the collapsing building as he or
she tried to exit the building, was a direct result of the destruction
Iconic soft-story failure of Olive View Hospital during 1971 San Fernando, California
earthquake
Olive view medical center after 1971 earthquake.