How priority buildings are identified
Priority buildings will be identified by one or more of the following ways:
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Buildings that are used as an emergency service or education centre: This includes some hospitals, civil defence buildings, schools, university buildings, early childhood education centres and private training establishments. These buildings will have 7.5 years to strengthen the entire building.
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Buildings that could collapse in an earthquake and block an emergency transport route: These buildings will have 7.5 years to strengthen the entire building.
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Buildings with unreinforced masonry (URM) that could fall onto a high traffic route: These buildings will have two time frames: 7.5 years to strengthen any URM elements that could fall onto the route, and the remainder of 15 years to strengthen the rest of the building.
An emergency transport route is a road/route identified as critical for emergency response.
A high traffic route is a street, road, or thoroughfare with high numbers of pedestrian or vehicle traffic.
URM buildings contain clay brick, concrete block, or natural stone units bound together using lime or cement mortar, without reinforcing elements such as steel reinforcing bars. This can also include strengthened URM buildings, unless there is evidence that the strengthening has achieved at least 34% NBS.
Map of emergency transport routes and high traffic routes
If you have strengthened the URM elements of the building
Buildings identified as a priority exclusively because they have URM elements that could fall onto a high traffic route are only required to have those URM elements strengthened within the initial 7.5 year time frame. If you believe that you have done so, and because of this your building is no longer a priority building, contact the Building Resilience team at BuildingResilience@wcc.govt.nz to update your building’s status.
What this means for buildings identified before 1 July 2017
Wellington City Council is required to issue updated notices for all existing earthquake-prone buildings (EPB).
In most cases, the deadline for strengthening will not change. However, buildings that have an existing earthquake-prone notice and are now identified as priority buildings may have a reduced deadline. How the deadline might change depends on how the building has been identified as a priority building.
If a building has been identified as a priority because of its use or because it is on an emergency transport route