Anonymous wrote:It’s a risk that’s worth enduring for the splendor of the area. That said, if you want to be as safe as possible, make sure of the following:
Your house is on Franciscan bedrock, or at the least, not in a high liquefaction zone,
Your house is not on a slide. Tip: don’t trust the publicly available maps. Make friends with a soils / civil engineer who has worked in the area for a long time. They have the best maps, constructed from their years of experience and their colleagues’ knowledge.
Your house has a good foundation. I cannot BELIEVE the number of people I know in SF who spent 2 million on a Victorian with a brick foundation!
If you want to be VERY safe, buy a single story house on a flat lot (with good soil/ bedrock).
Buy outside the high risk wildfire zones.
Buy outside the dam and reservoir inundation zones: some have not been retrofitted yet.
Buy near a major evac route in case of post quake fire.
Buy in an area with undergrounded power lines to lower post quake fire risk.
Do not buy a gorgeous MCM house with huge floor to ceiling windows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, what do you expect someone to say? Yes, there’s an earthquake risk. Could happen tomorrow, could happen 100 years from now. From a geological standpoint, those odds aren’t all that different.
How high is the risk?
Is your google broken? 72% chance of a big one in the next 25 years or so.
https://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2016/3020/fs20163020.pdf
No need to be rude. Was hoping to hear from people living in the area. Thanks for link.
I live in SF and my google gives the same stats as PP's. You're literally asking about facts you can look up. Perhaps you meant to ask a different question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, what do you expect someone to say? Yes, there’s an earthquake risk. Could happen tomorrow, could happen 100 years from now. From a geological standpoint, those odds aren’t all that different.
How high is the risk?
Is your google broken? 72% chance of a big one in the next 25 years or so.
https://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2016/3020/fs20163020.pdf
No need to be rude. Was hoping to hear from people living in the area. Thanks for link.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, what do you expect someone to say? Yes, there’s an earthquake risk. Could happen tomorrow, could happen 100 years from now. From a geological standpoint, those odds aren’t all that different.
How high is the risk?
Is your google broken? 72% chance of a big one in the next 25 years or so.
https://pubs.usgs.gov/fs/2016/3020/fs20163020.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, what do you expect someone to say? Yes, there’s an earthquake risk. Could happen tomorrow, could happen 100 years from now. From a geological standpoint, those odds aren’t all that different.
How high is the risk?
Anonymous wrote:I mean, what do you expect someone to say? Yes, there’s an earthquake risk. Could happen tomorrow, could happen 100 years from now. From a geological standpoint, those odds aren’t all that different.