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03/27/2007 <br />Mitigation 15-1. At the City Building Official's discretion, future discretionary <br />development projects proposed within the Precise Plan area shall be required to <br />undertake detailed, design-level geotechnical investigations that include analysis of <br />project site seismic stability, liquefaction potential, and soil response characteristics with <br />respect to ground acceleration, in accordance with Special Publication 112, "Guidelines <br />for Analyzing and Mitigating Liquefaction in California," published by the California <br />Division of Mines and Geology. <br />The detailed, design-level geotechnical investigations should include the following: <br />• Seismic stability analysis of the existing on-site soil; <br />• Evaluation of liquefaction potential throught he performance of additional cone <br />penetration tests, borings, and/or equivalent methods; and <br />• Determination of site-specific soil response characteristics and maximum <br />credible ground acceleration for an earthquake recurrence interval specified by <br />the City. <br />Recommendations from the investigations, including appropriate soil stabilization and <br />foundation construction techniques, minimum setbacks around potentially unstable <br />areas, and criteria for the compaction and treatment of on-site fills, shall be incorporated <br />into the final project grading and foundation plans. In general, these recommendations <br />are expected to include the following requirements: <br />• that all construction comply with the most current edition of the Uniform Building <br />Code) for Seismic Zone 4, or with the most recently adopted building codes. <br />• that all project structural designs be based on proper estimates by the project <br />geotechnical engineer of peak and maximum repeatable earthquake-induced <br />ground surface accelerations expected to occur on the project site; and <br />• that excavations will be adequately sloped or shored in order to minimize ground <br />movements. <br />Finding: Implementation of these measures set forth in mitigation measure 15-1, <br />combined with conformance with standard Uniform Building Code, City of Redwood <br />City, and other applicable regulations, would reduce the potential effects of ground <br />shaking to aless-than-significant level. <br />B. Soil Erosion and Sedimentation Impacts <br />Impact 15-2: Soil Erosion and Sedimentation. Under either the Maximum or <br />Moderate Intensity Precise Plan alternative, grading for future development in <br />accordance with the proposed Precise Plan would temporarily disturb the site's existing <br />topography and vegetative cover, leaving soils exposed to wind and water erosion <br />during the construction period. Eroded soils could be washed into on-site or off-site <br />drainage facilities. Resulting sedimentation could affect the flows in these drainage <br />facilities, increasing flooding potential and maintenance problems and degrading water <br />Atty/Reso/Reso.1683 33 14769 <br />030707 Muff #613 <br />