HomeMy WebLinkAboutMinutes 1996-02-21 Mayor Jack Drago
Council:
Joseph A. Fernekes
Eugene R. Mullin
~-"'John R. Penna
Robert Yee
MINUTES
City Council
Municipal Services Building
Community Room
February 21, 1996
106
AGENDA
ADJOURNED REOULAR MEETINO
CALL TO ORDER: (Cassette No. 1)
ROLL CALL:
Capital Improvement Program Budget - retrofitting of
City Hall; retrofitting of the Library; the sidewalk pro-
gram and East of 101 funding, z~/20
Councilman Penna Arrived at the Meeting at 7:12 p.m.
A~TION TAKEN
ADJOURNED REGULAR MEETING
7:07 p.m. Mayor Drago presiding.
Council Present:
Council Absent:
Fernekes, Mullin, Penna, Yee and
Drago.
None.
City Manager. Wilson related: the study session was
to cover some of the capital items we have been
discussing; he will ask for a closed session to be
added to the Agenda,' which requires a 2/3 vote for
the City Attorney needs direction before the next
meeting on pending litigation; staff is in the process
of putting together all capital improvement budget
documents with Council's suggestions incorporated
and their order of priority; putting East of 101
projects on hold, because of the funding source it is
being delayed and they will come back and address
the policy issues; boards are being processed for
education purposes and the Director of Public Works
plans to use acetate overlays and demonstrate multi-
level planning; staff will focus on the retrofitting of
City Hall tonight for there are any number of studies
on what can occur; at what level the repair work
should be done to the facility; questions about the
use of the facility in the future; whether to remain as
a functioning City Hall, museum or arts center for
historic purposes and a new City Hall built on the
site; the site could be the existing parking lot or the
old annex and take that down and put up a multi-
story; right now there is money in the capital im-
provement budget, some is redevelopment funds for
the restoration of the Library for redevelopment
funds cannot be used for City Hall; Director of
Public Works will walk Council through and the
Consultant will explain the Codes and their analysis.
Director of Public Works Gibbs explained: the first
thing they did was look at the probability of earth-
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AGENDA AC_TIQN TAKEN
.. Capital Improvement Program Budget - Continued.
quakes in this area and the analysis for a 30 year 9.3
event on the Richter Scale; the UBC explains how
the structure is to be designed and the UCBC is for
building conservation and historic buildings and
allows you to analyze the building without going to
the high standards of the Building Code; these build-
ings are old, have brick and are unreinforced ma-
sonry; we are located within five miles of the San
Andreas fault which brings us into an intensity of a
level of 8; the scale is from 1 - 12 and depends on
how close you are to the fault; the soil comes into
play with the analysis of the building; if there is an
earthquake over the 8 magnitude both City Hall and
the Library would fall down and be a loss and de-
pending on the time of day - there will be loss of
lives; retrofitting to the UBC, City Hall would per-
form as a new building; the cost is $375,000 to do
the construction only on the Library without reloca-
tion of employees; relocation cost for City Hall
$745,000 and bringing the people back, plus renting
space brings it to one million; estimate for a new
building is $150.00 per sq. ft., potentially knocking
down the annex with a construction cost of three
million dollars which is the same cost as retrofitting
both buildings; if nothing is done to City Hall it has
to be closed and the only occupancy for the building
is for someone to use it a few hours a day; etc.
Councilman Penna was bothered that Europe has
buildings on major faults in Italy and Greece that are
built on blocks that were not demolished because of
earthquakes, but because of battles. He stated, cer-
tainly the earthquakes in Italy and Greece are as
strong as they are in this area. City Hall is a build-
ing built on solid ground, no fill here, it is rock and
questioned how they could come up with their anal-
ysis.
Mr. Evan Reis, Degenkolb Engineers, replied: the
earthquakes in Italy and Greece are infrequent,
maybe 200 to 10,000 years in between occurrences;
now those buildings are old, but not that old and
they do collapse from earthquakes.
He related: his firm was asked to perform a risk
analysis per the UBC levels; what the levels would
be if the buildings were brought up to a new level;
he showed illustrations of his firm's evaluations on
doing nothing to the buildings, bringing them up to
UCB and UCBC standards and how those would fair
in damage under various earthquake levels; his
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AGENDA _ACIIQN TAKEN
.._.Capital Improvement Program Budget - Continued.
firm has been evaluating damage from earthquakes
throughout the world for fifty years and has data on
thousands of buildings during earthquakes; he stated
that their experience and technical expertise led to
the charts in question on earthquake intensity levels;
most people tend to acknowledge earthquake damage
by its magnitude, but that is only one side of the
equation, the other side is the distance you are from
the earthquake; in Loma Prieta they were on solid
soil, but in Santa Cruz buildings collapsed, as well
as in Guam due to the soil; the scale is one to
twelve and one you barely feel; a five will awaken
you from bed, you will see shaking and pictures
coming off the shelves and breaking, but a twelve
means almost all buildings are destroyed and new
buildings have damage and can collapse; in an eight
intensity earthquake old masonry buildings normally
suffer partial to total collapse; an 8.3 intensity earth-
quake they expect to occur on the San Andreas fault;
30 miles away from Loma Prieta we felt the earth-
quake, things ,rattled, but there was no structural
damage; they looked at City Hall for life safety in a
large earthquake and how much damage as a per-
centage of the replacement cost, and what percent-
age could you expect; if employees were relocated it
could be for as long as one and one half years;
because City Hall is an URM building there is high
risk to life safety and damage up to 80%, when 50%
is considered a total loss, and if you replace the
building you are looking at a year and a half of
down time; UBC standards would make the building
perform as a new building; they would keep the
bricks and,reinforce the concrete, you have reduced
the life risk factor and damage will be reduced to
cracks in the walls; you have to weigh the cost of
the retrofitting with the loss of life and property.
Mayor Drago asked, if we are going to consider this
building as an historical building and remove people
for a museum or whatever, there is no longer a need
to use the basement, so couldn't the building just be
braced to the basement.
Director of Public Works Gibbs replied: it doesn't
make any difference because that is the strongest
area of the building, the basement is a bunker al-
ready and yes, it will be tied into the basement; one
way is with the exterior wall to gunite a six inch
new wall inside the building and tie that at intervals
to the brick and make the whole structure monoli-
thic; they put rods and grout into the rods and pull it
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AGENDA A~TION TAK_EN
._3~apital Improvement Program Budget - Continued.
2/21/96
Page 4
down tight to tie it all together and that is reinforc-
ing the brick; etc.
Discussion followed: why use the 1988 UBC; there
was the earthquake in Japan and Guam; Japan does
not retrofit a building, they just wait until they want
to demolish a building to build a new one; UCB is
rewritten every year because of earthquakes; 1993
or 1994 UCB may be more restrictive than the 1988
Code; it would be different if City Hall was a steel
frame building; what guaranty does the Council have
that the three million dollars won't run up to five
million dollars and the building will still be
unfunctional; if the Council is going to wrap this up
at the least cost and utilize the rooms better - that
would take us back to the Code for historic build-
ings that allows us to do less work; if the historic
code was used, what is the savings; that is close to
the full Code level of the UBC; the City has two
million for City Hall, but if the historic code is
used, then redevelopment funds can relieve the
General Fund; there is also the relocation and rental
costs while we are out of here; City Hall needs
drainage improvements, as well as repainting and
ADA improvements whenever the retrofitting is
done; using the historic code would only save
$50,000; the parking funds could come from the
Parking District; we will lose six inches only in the
perimeter walls; if a new building is built you don't
need to rent a building you can just move in when it
is finished; Finance and the Attorney would have to
be relocated, so there is a cost; originally the idea
was to demolish the annex, put parking underneath
and build a multi-story building to house City Hall
and the Annex employees in 15,000 sq. ft.; go
ahead with the Library using the UCBC; there is a
State Historic Code that allows alleviation from the
UBC and there might be additional ADA require-
ments; Councilman Yee was not comfortable in
making that kind of a decision on moving the City
Hall to point C for he does not have enough data to
make that decision for these people are picking these
numbers out of the air and he would hate to have to
come up with five million dollars later on; staff can
go ahead with estimates for a new building; Council
has to know for a fact that redevelopment will take
care of this building, otherwise it is not worth it;
there has to be a plan on future needs and what the
City Hall is going to look like before a decision can
be made; Councilman Penna likes the idea of pre-
serving this building for its historical value and it
AGENDA ACTION TAKEN
_._Capital Improvement Program Budget - Continued.
Closed Session pursuant to GC 54956.9 - initiation of
li.tigation- one case.
ECALL TO ORDER:
is the symbol of the City; he likes the idea of using
redevelopment funds to create a performing arts
center or museum; he would like to see all City
offices in one building and one built to replace this
building that should become something else - like
the idea of performing arts; Councilman Mullin
noted this was the same conversation that surfaced
years ago with the relocation of the MSB, because
when you split services you divide the City and the
argument was we could not build here for everyone
to be here, but there wasn't the money or the will;
he felt it was an exciting project, but it is completely
conceptual; we need to see what it will look like and
it has to tie in architecturally, because you are not
going to okay a 90s building in with a 20s structure;
City Manager Wilson stated the project may have
tripled in cost for they were only talking about the
Annex and City Hall people in the building and
there was no thought to bring back any other De-
partments, but only to replicate the space here but
not to commingle; he is thinking of a rectangular,
no frills building; Councilman Mullin wants to see
site plans and renderings; Mayor Drago suggested a
cherrete from the San Mateo Architects; City Man-
ager is planning on spending a few thousand and
getting a rough concept; Mayor Drago is bother by
the steel buildings coming down like the URM
buildings and is more interested in the soil condi-
tion, for this building is not going anywhere, it is
built on a rock; a building owner does not expect his
building to be damaged, so engineers are always
trying to make buildings better; buildings on fill; ete
City Manager Wilson stated the sidewalk program
appears to be without change and staff will maintain
the existing process where we keep the ordinance on
the books, but we will do the work ourselves.
M/S Fernekes/Penna - To add an item to the Agenda
pursuant to GC 54954.2 that arose too late for the
Agenda for a Closed Session on initiation of litiga-
tion.
Carried by unanimous voice vote.
Council adjourned to a Closed Session at 8:09 p.m.
to discuss the item added to the Agenda.
Mayor Drago recalled the meeting to order at 9:06
p.m., all Council was present, no action was taken
and direction was given.
2/21/96
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A~ENDA
ACT!QN TAKEN
RESPECTFULLY SUBMI'ITED,
APPROVED.
Barbara A. Battaya, City Clerk ~.J ~~
City of South San Francisco City of South San Francisco
The entries of this Council meeting show the action taken by the City Council to dispose of an item. Oral communica-
tions, arguments and comments are recorded on tape. The tape and documents related to the items are on file in the
Office of the City Clerk and are available for inspection, review and copying.
2/21/96
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