Ichijo teamed up with rubber giant Bridgestone Inc. to develop a system that minimizes structural damage to single-family houses during earthquakes. The seismic-isolation system also dramatically reduces damage inside houses by using two components: Teflon-coated stainless-steel sliding plates and rubber bearings.
The sliding plates carry the load of the house under normal conditions and allow it to move relative to the earth during earthquakes. The rubber bearings pull the house back to its original position after it has slid. The result is a house that basically stands still while the earth below shakes and quakes. Ichijo’s base-isolation houses were given blanket approval by Japan’s construction minister in 2000; two years later, the approval was upgraded for houses on “soft ground” (such as sand, peat, and silt).
Ichijo has sold more than 1800 seismic-isolation houses in Japan and has installed the system on some buildings in the United States: The city halls of San Francisco and Oakland, Calif., both are outfitted with the system, as is the University of Southern California’s Leavey Library. The maintenance-free system is warranted for 60 years and adds about $20,000 to the cost of a two-story, 1200-sq.-ft. house (which sells for roughly $400,000 in Japan). To test the system, engineers built fullscale wood-frame houses on a platform that was capable of producing high-intensity seismic waves. After the platforms were shocked with 300 seismic waves, the houses were inspected for damage. Wineglasses typically didn’t fall off the dining tables in the isolated houses, but the dishes came crashing out of the kitchen cabinets in the nonisolated houses (see photos).
Go to www.ichijo.co.jp/technology/menshin/ichijo_mensin.shtml to see some fun video of the test houses. The site is written in Japanese, so just scroll down and look for the video players.