Categories
Architecture

Earthquake-proof houses

Since I started living in Japan one of the main concerns in my life are earthquakes. I have always wondered if buildings and houses are really prepared to endure a great earthquake. The truth is that, after asking many people and informing myself, most of the structures would resist less than you would have expected. Earthquake legislation was changed in 1981 and every building or house built after that year is supposed to be more secure against seismic shakings. In 2007 the legislation was changed once again to make it even more strict. But even so, everybody is afraid that there will be a huge earthquake with epicenter in a very populated area.

If you come to Japan, the newer the house you stay the better, at least it should have been built after 1981. Earthquakes are one of the reasons (among many of them) why houses value goes down over the years.

Earthquake proof house
A house in construction with a special system in the walls that is able to withstand strong shakings.

Earthquake proof house
Down to the left you can see the structure of the walls interior. There is some kind of “mobile scissors system” integrated inside each of the house walls.

Earthquake proof house
This is a sketch of how an earthquake would affect the Tokyo town hall.

Other posts about earthquakes

Categories
Trains

2 minutes in the train

Japan train
The two girls in the left are chatting, the foreigner in the center talks on the phone (Don’t do it! It is considered bad manners), the girl next to him thinks and the girls in the background plays with her Nintendo DS

Japan train
The girl with the yellow purse sends an e-mail with her cellphone, the other two girls keep on talking.

Japan train
The girl with the yellow purse checks her hair with a hand mirror, the girl to the left browses the Internet on her cellphone.

Japan train
The girl with the yellow purse keeps on checking her hair and the other girls keep on chatting.

Japan train
The girl with the yellow stops fixing her hair and eats an onigiri (rice ball).

Japan train
The girl that was doing nothing in the first picture falls asleep.

Categories
Technology

Fuel cell battery charger by Toshiba

This is the first fuel cell battery charger on sale in the world. It is called Toshiba Dynario and until now it is only available in Japan. It works with concentrated methanol that Toshiba sells in little bottles/batteries. Dynario uses methanol and the oxygen it obtains from the air to produce, through a chemical reaction, DC electric current (5V-400mA). It can be connected to any USB device and it looks like with only one little methanol bottle you can recharge you cellphone several times. The product has been released only to test the market and is quite expensive, it costs 30,000 yen (222 euro, 332 dollars), but if it is successful there will be soon more fuel cell battery chargers on sale.

Toshiba Dynario

Toshiba Dynario

Via