in Minxian County, which was hit hard by the quake, were earthen homes that could not withstand strong quakes, Wang Lanmin, head of the provincial seismological bureau, said yesterday.
On the other hand, houses that were built or rebuilt after a massive landslide that occurred in Minxian on May 10 2012 suffered only minor damage in Monday’s earthquake, according to Wang.
“All the adobe houses (in my village) collapsed,” said Zhu Wenqing, a resident of the village of Majiagou in Minxian’s Meichuan Township.
Zhu’s eight-room adobe house swayed but did not collapse when the 6,6-magnitude earthquake hit Monday morning. Frequent aftershocks, however, turned his home into a pile of rubble.
“Houses build out of brick and wood held up much better,” Zhu said.
An initial investigation showed that the quake caused the collapses of 51 800 houses and severely damaged 240 000 others, according to statistics from local authorities.
More than 360 schools collapsed or were damaged, which may postpone the fall semester for about 16 100 students, according to Dan Zhita, deputy director of the provincial education department.
Authorities have worked to tear down potentially dangerous schools in order to avoid secondary disasters, Dan said, adding that efforts are being made to set up temporary classrooms so that all students can attend school as scheduled.
China has been working on a quake-proof rural housing construction project since 2006 that has benefited more than 2 million households so far. In 2009, the Gansu provincial government proposed building 2 million quake-proof houses within five years. — Xinhua.



