New York City’s Reactions to the Earthquake (2024)

environment

By Curbed Staff

New York City’s Reactions to the Earthquake (1)

Photo: John Angelillo/UPI/Shutterstock

This morning, New Yorkers across the city felt their buildings shaking. The first reaction was disbelief. Then came denial. But it was confirmed by the U.S. Geological Survey: At 10:23 a.m., a 4.8-magnitude earthquake originating in Lebanon, New Jersey, had indeed occurred. It was felt as far as Philadelphia and Boston. The effects of the quake are still being assessed.

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Adriane Quinlan

Some damage to our neighbors in Jersey

The mayor says the Department of Buildings is still doing inspections but hasn’t found any major structural problems in the city yet. (Newark fared worse with four houses pushed together “like dominoes,” according to one report.)

In the end, the quake’s legacy in the city might have been less physical than emotional, a collective event we will find ourselves reminiscing about for years. And at least a couple of stores are already capitalizing on that feeling:

Plus a more permanent way to mark the day:

New York City’s Reactions to the Earthquake (3)

Photo: Chris Crowley

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Adriane Quinlan

What the earthquake interrupted

The U.N. Security Council was in the middle of meeting about an extremely serious issue — the plight of children in Gaza — when, as the president of Save the Children was speaking, the room shook; aides, ambassadors, and officials looked at one another. Then an official cracked a joke: “Madam Secretary, you’re making the earth shake.”

Across the city, New Yorkers doing slightly less impactful things were also thrown off by the quake:

But some might think Justin Allen had it the worst: He was in the middle of a vasectomy when he felt what seemed like a “train passing by,” he told The Guardian. The doctor put his tools down. Then they both started laughing. In a response to his tweet about the moment, written in caps lock, his wife shared a picture of Allen safe outside the clinic and called it a “sign.”

Other New Yorkers found the quake’s timing so awkward they chose not to acknowledge it at all:

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Simon van Zuylen-Wood

Yankee Stadium shakes for the first time since the Bush administration

The “new” Yankee Stadium, inaugurated in 2009 after the end of its predecessor’s 85-year run, famously lacks charm and personality. The stadium was designed to accommodate luxury patrons: The box seats behind home plate and the dugouts are too expensive to regularly sell out; the drunken “bleacher creatures” can no longer yell at or throw things towards opposing right fielders with ease, since pricier seats were installed in front of them, buffering them from the field. The point is, only an earthquake could get this stadium to shake the way the old Stadium used to. A couple hours before today’s home opener against the Blue Jays, which is taking place on time, it did. Briefly.

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Adriane Quinlan

But were you here in 2011?

The earthquake was the biggest in 140 years, but they’re actually more common than our hysterical reaction today suggests. Astoria saw a smaller, 1.7-magnitude quake earlier this year, and little shocks pop up all the time —there was even a 0.8-magnitude quake centered in Gramercy Park in 2004. Researchers at Columbia University count 18 bigger quakes going back to 1737, including the 2011 quake that toppled a chimney in Red Hook and had workers running out of midtown towers in shock. Huge Ma, or Vax Daddy, the engineer who set up an actually efficient system for finding vaccine appointments early in the pandemic, pointed this out:

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Adriane Quinlan

Expect slowdowns … everywhere

The rattle of the earthquake encouraged officials to stop traffic through the Holland Tunnel (which is now open but with lots of delays) and halted or delayed take-offs at JFK, Newark, and La Guardia. Meanwhile, rail traffic got even slower, as Amtrak said trains in the Northeast will travel slow and steady until every inch of track gets inspected.

The subway authorities are still saying the system is okay —though with 665 miles of track, it’s unclear how they figured that out so fast:

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Clio Chang

So are we in the end times?

Let’s look at the facts, shall we? We just experienced an earthquake. On Monday, there will be an eclipse. Plus, up to a trillion cicadas are about to enter the country. Or maybe it’s just an extra-chaotic Mercury retrograde. You decide!

Or just read our colleague Sarah Jones on what exactly is happening here.

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Adriane Quinlan

The city’s most iconic skyscraper says it’s okay

While New Yorkers shared stories of frames falling off walls and tiles breaking, a spokesman says New York’s schools seem to be fine. NYC Housing directed anyone whose building was affected to the Office of Emergency Management.

But the building that most people outside the city associate with disasters — at least those big Hollywood disasters involving King Kong and the Ghostbusters —assured the public that it hasn’t been affected:

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Adriane Quinlan

Performances were interrupted by the quake — or the alerts

Among the many delays caused by the earthquake was one prompted not by the quake itself but by its alerts. The New York Philharmonic had to put off the beginning of an 11 a.m. performance, the New York Times reported, due to the late emergency alerts beeping through the hall. At 11:46, another alert — warning of aftershocks — ripped through the crowd.

Scruffier performers worked through it. A host at Who Weekly, a podcast that covers the news and non-news of B-, C-, and D-list celebrities, reported that they were at their microphones when they felt the shake. So they kept recording.

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Adriane Quinlan

Thanks for the late emergency alert

In the moments after the quake, New Yorkers jumped on their phones and started texting and tweeting about it. But the official alert from the city came what felt like a lifetime later, and Councilmember Shaun Abreu noticed the delay.

The council was already stirred up by the lack of notifications for major floods this fall and the wildfire smoke that forecasters saw coming last year, but it didn’t lead to the cancellation of city events — or even the cancellation of a Yankees game.

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Sukjong Hong

So far, no major damage has been reported

The subways are okay!

No injuries reported yet, either.

But very sorry to this person’s driveway.

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Sukjong Hong

What was that?

Yes, that was an earthquake in New York City (and New Jersey, where its epicenter was). The U.S. Geological Survey reported it was a 4.8-magnitude quake that occurred sometime after 10:20 a.m. But a lot of New Yorkers initially thought it was something much more mundane: construction. Is this how we’ll sleep through the next big one? Thinking it’s the condo project going up next door?

This is a breaking story, please check back for updates.

Tags:

  • earthquake
  • environment
  • cityscape

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New York City’s Reactions to the Earthquake
New York City’s Reactions to the Earthquake (2024)

FAQs

Can New York City survive an earthquake? ›

Although earthquakes in New York City have a low probability of occurrence, any potential damage here could be catastrophic due to the density and age of buildings and the interdependencies of complex layers of infrastructure.

Did Manhattan feel the earthquake? ›

New York was shaken by a 4.8 magnitude earthquake Friday morning, according to the Associated Press. The earthquake occurred at 10:23 a.m. ET about eight miles northwest of Bridgewater, N.J., per the Euro-Mediterranean Seismological Centre, and rattled skyscrapers and buildings across Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens.

Is there an earthquake fault line in New York City? ›

Even though the East Coast doesn't have a history of earthquakes, there's no escaping the movements of the tectonic plates. There are several fault lines located both within the Tri-State Area and New York City neighborhoods adjacent to us here at Columbia University.

Is the subway safe after an earthquake? ›

MTA CEO Janno Lieber says it's safe to ride even through a small earthquake, explaining New York City's subway system remained fully functional during the 4.8 magnitude earthquake. "The service on the transit system, all aspects of the transit system, maintained continuously operating safely throughout," Lieber said.

Are buildings in New York City earthquake proof? ›

The skyscrapers of New York City are generally built to withstand an earthquake of 6.5 magnitude and larger, Rahimian said.

Which city suffered the worst earthquake in American history? ›

Anchorage, Alaska (magnitude 9.2) - March 1964

The most powerful recorded earthquake in U.S. history happened on March 27, 1964, at 5:36 p.m. local time, the U.S. Geological Survey reports. The magnitude 9.2 earthquake occurred in the Prince William Sound region of Alaska.

What is the earthquake capital of the United States? ›

Parkfield, California, also known as the Earthquake Capital of the World. United States Geological Survey does continuous monitoring of earthquake faults, including the famous San Andreas Fault which runs through the center of Parkfield.

When was the last major earthquake in New York City? ›

The last 5.0 earthquake centered in New York City happened in 1884. The city also felt a 2.6-magnitude earthquake in 2001. Earthquakes are rare in the New York City area, but there are several small fault lines under Manhattan and a major fault in New Jersey, called the Ramapo Fault.

Will there be another earthquake in NYC? ›

Hazard researchers don't expect a cataclysmically strong quake, akin to what West Coast faults can produce, to strike the eastern U.S. Nevertheless, it's possible that an intense quake could one day produce destructive levels of shaking.

How often does NYC have earthquakes? ›

Earthquakes of a 5 or greater magnitude occur once every 100 years according to a report from the Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University. The last magnitude 5 quake in New York City occurred off the coast of Rockaway Beach in 1884.

What was the worst earthquake in NY? ›

A magnitude 5.2 earthquake that rattled the Tri-State in 1884 is thought to have been the most significant event to impact the region.

Could an earthquake destroy NYC? ›

Seismologists said that severe earthquakes are relatively rare around the city and cannot be predicted. But if one were to hit, it could inflict serious damage.

When was the last earthquake in New York in 2024? ›

Shallow Quakes and Older Buildings
DateMagnitudeLocation
April 5, 20244.8Whitehouse Station
October 16, 20124.7Hollis Center
January 16, 19944.6Sinking Spring
January 19, 19824.5Sanbornton
9 more rows
Apr 15, 2024

How bad is a 4.8 earthquake? ›

The magnitude and effect of an earthquake, according to Michigan Technological University: Below 2.5: Generally not felt. 2.5 to 5.4: Minor or no damage. 5.5 to 6.0: Slight damage to buildings.

Will New York get a major earthquake? ›

“We don't tend to expect extremely large magnitude event in this part of the world, however they could happen,” Hatem said. “It's just a very small chance.” For years, scientists have warned New York City could be more vulnerable to seismic activity than initially thought.

When was the last big earthquake in NYC? ›

Shaking was felt from Washington D.C. to Maine, according to the agency. The 2024 earthquakes don't compare with the 5.8 magnitude quake that rattled New York City and the East Coast on Aug. 23, 2011. It was centered in Virginia and felt from Washington, D.C. to Boston.

Can the Empire State Building withstand an earthquake? ›

After the earthquake hit New York with the 5.9 tremor, the Empire State Building was put to the test, and remained standing. -Earthquake Resistant is the Minimum permissible earthquake protection. -Earthquake Resistant buildings are so designed so as to prevent a Total Building Collapse thereby saving lives.

Can NYC survive a tsunami? ›

So, Can NYC Survive a Tsunami? The answer is a resounding "most likely, yes!" The city's geography and lower risk of earthquake activity make a full-on tsunami a very remote possibility.

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