Dubai Telegraph - 'Fear and anxiety': Bangkok residents seek quake-proof homes

EUR -
AED 4.103177
AFN 80.80677
ALL 99.760199
AMD 436.88058
ANG 1.999864
AOA 1018.806249
ARS 1202.695032
AUD 1.791163
AWG 2.010802
AZN 1.897391
BAM 1.972829
BBD 2.256558
BDT 135.790879
BGN 1.962286
BHD 0.421033
BIF 3322.246622
BMD 1.117112
BND 1.493478
BOB 7.72245
BRL 6.617106
BSD 1.117637
BTN 96.245167
BWP 15.762776
BYN 3.657437
BYR 21895.404758
BZD 2.244937
CAD 1.564108
CDF 3211.698312
CHF 0.930549
CLF 0.028655
CLP 1099.684871
CNY 8.210833
CNH 8.171979
COP 4840.671831
CRC 574.655059
CUC 1.117112
CUP 29.603481
CVE 111.225052
CZK 25.075853
DJF 198.816105
DKK 7.463032
DOP 69.206747
DZD 148.418494
EGP 57.388185
ERN 16.756687
ETB 147.382713
FJD 2.567571
FKP 0.874753
GBP 0.862215
GEL 3.07766
GGP 0.874753
GHS 17.307856
GIP 0.874753
GMD 80.514351
GNF 9666.51189
GTQ 8.618647
GYD 233.512225
HKD 8.669552
HNL 28.842496
HRK 7.537601
HTG 146.491204
HUF 414.321615
IDR 18924.994045
ILS 4.19898
IMP 0.874753
INR 96.848775
IQD 1460.233787
IRR 47023.839539
ISK 146.828606
JEP 0.874753
JMD 176.41599
JOD 0.792001
JPY 161.618251
KES 144.63799
KGS 97.072648
KHR 4461.080535
KMF 497.788877
KPW 1005.416001
KRW 1645.714346
KWD 0.343604
KYD 0.926406
KZT 581.702782
LAK 24151.699543
LBP 100347.06874
LKR 333.188284
LRD 223.163207
LSL 22.150125
LTL 3.298543
LVL 0.67573
LYD 5.414116
MAD 10.604975
MDL 19.809829
MGA 5178.020339
MKD 62.259216
MMK 2345.117869
MNT 3921.104385
MOP 8.923148
MRU 44.15781
MUR 50.142206
MVR 17.248258
MWK 1934.978097
MXN 22.885279
MYR 5.023338
MZN 71.367262
NAD 22.150125
NGN 1755.559111
NIO 41.065028
NOK 12.070043
NPR 155.030677
NZD 1.943768
OMR 0.430112
PAB 1.117112
PEN 4.198293
PGK 4.599039
PHP 64.02504
PKR 313.207795
PLN 4.339646
PYG 8949.826807
QAR 4.066661
RON 5.037089
RSD 118.542221
RUB 96.321704
RWF 1578.488545
SAR 4.189353
SBD 9.478425
SCR 16.21126
SDG 670.637586
SEK 11.018578
SGD 1.505781
SHP 0.877875
SLE 25.425799
SLL 23425.291519
SOS 638.053775
SRD 40.967104
STD 23121.973053
SVC 9.774557
SYP 14525.052675
SZL 22.150125
THB 38.389538
TJS 12.130868
TMT 3.908851
TND 3.435832
TOP 2.697601
TRY 42.353053
TTD 7.585361
TWD 36.714693
TZS 2980.776994
UAH 46.185828
UGX 4129.463362
USD 1.117112
UYU 47.986794
UZS 14434.021218
VES 82.376399
VND 29068.691864
VUV 140.958213
WST 3.221949
XAF 663.718503
XAG 0.035916
XAU 0.000354
XCD 3.023147
XDR 0.83937
XOF 663.718503
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.348255
ZAR 21.774181
ZMK 10055.355155
ZMW 31.308769
ZWL 359.709765
  • RBGPF

    -7.7300

    60.27

    -12.83%

  • CMSC

    -0.3500

    22.25

    -1.57%

  • RIO

    -1.5000

    54.11

    -2.77%

  • NGG

    -0.4600

    64.75

    -0.71%

  • JRI

    -0.3400

    11.65

    -2.92%

  • BCC

    -5.4100

    93.03

    -5.82%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3400

    8.86

    -3.84%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    48.11

    -0.89%

  • SCS

    -0.5600

    10.05

    -5.57%

  • GSK

    -1.2300

    33.25

    -3.7%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    40.3

    +0.22%

  • BCE

    -0.3780

    20.622

    -1.83%

  • VOD

    -0.2200

    8.36

    -2.63%

  • AZN

    -2.9150

    63.845

    -4.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.4850

    22.265

    -2.18%

  • BP

    -1.7550

    26.145

    -6.71%

'Fear and anxiety': Bangkok residents seek quake-proof homes
'Fear and anxiety': Bangkok residents seek quake-proof homes / Photo: Amaury PAUL - AFP

'Fear and anxiety': Bangkok residents seek quake-proof homes

Shaken hours earlier by a massive earthquake, Phatsakon Kaewkla's terror was magnified when he came home to find gaping cracks in the walls of his 22nd-floor Bangkok apartment.

Text size:

Feeling unsafe in the building damaged by the biggest tremors to hit the capital in generations, the 23-year-old Thai decided to stay away for two days until experts gave the high-rise the all-clear.

The sales coordinator is now one of many Bangkok residents wondering if they should seek safer housing in a city where hundreds of residential buildings were damaged by the 7.7-magnitude quake that struck neighbouring Myanmar on March 28.

The owners of Phatsakon's condominium assured him that engineers had checked every part of the building and concluded it was habitable.

But he is still spooked about the cracks.

"I feel a little bit scared. And also my mum told me to move out from here," he said.

Over 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) away from the epicentre, the Thai capital -- its skyline dotted with hundreds of towers and glinting high-rises -- virtually never experiences such tremors.

Bangkok-based real estate consultant Owen Zhu, 40, told AFP that the impact on his sector had been "significant".

"People seem to have realised that living in high-rise buildings might carry greater risks when it comes to earthquake resistance compared to two-story or low-rise structures," the Chinese property expert said.

The earthquake prompted a flurry of enquiries from residents looking to relocate in the past week, he says, due to widespread "fear and anxiety" of living far above ground.

- 'Gap in perception' -

Yigit Buyukergun from Turkey was at home in Bangkok with his wife when the quake struck. After it subsided, they emerged from under a table to inspect the damage on their 22nd-floor flat.

"Everywhere is cracked, especially in the corridor. You can see all the roof is really bad condition," the 25-year-old said.

Despite Buyukergun's safety concerns, the owners of the block seemed unfazed.

They say it is "100 percent safe, but I don't believe it," he said.

A large number of studio apartments in Bangkok's sprawling residential projects are rented out on annual leases requiring a two-month deposit.

Most condos do not permit short-term rentals for security reasons, and only hotels may lease for under 30 days.

Zhu says tenants and property owners often disagree over the habitability of quake-damaged apartments, with disputes becoming more common.

There is "a gap in perception and judgment between the two parties," he told AFP.

"The landlord sees the unit as safe, while the tenant feels it's unsafe and insists on moving out and getting their deposit back".

- Raising the bar -

Earthquake safety standards for buildings in Thailand were "not particularly strict" before the disaster and not something property-seeking clients specifically asked about, Zhu said.

Heightening anxiety since the quake was the shocking total collapse of a 30-storey construction in Bangkok that trapped dozens of workers, most of whom remain unaccounted for over a week later.

City authorities are now investigating whether substandard building materials had been used in its construction.

Zhu says more of his clients are now opting for low-rises.

For house hunters still considering high-rises, they often require that the property sustained "minimal or no damage during the recent earthquake, or at least was not severely affected".

He believes property prices will grow in the long-term as demand for safer buildings drives the adoption of costly seismic resistance measures, adding that "the bar for Thailand's real estate sector has been raised".

But for Buyukergun, talk of improving building regulations is not enough to calm his fears about the uncontrollable factors of geology.

While the prevalence of earthquakes in his home country of Turkey made him feel uneasy, he had not expected to feel the same way about Thailand.

"Thailand is safe," he recalled thinking before.

"That's why I couldn't believe (the) earthquake (happened)."

F.El-Yamahy--DT