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CSUN

One Mile from the Epicenter: How CSUN Became the Closest University to the Northridge Quake

CAearthquakeadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

At 4:31 AM PST on January 17, 1994 (Martin Luther King Jr. Day), the magnitude 6.7 Northridge earthquake struck approximately one mile from the California State University, Northridge campus, the closest university to any major California earthquake epicenter. All 58 buildings on the CSUN campus sustained significant damage totaling $406 million; Parking Structure C collapsed entirely, and the Fine Arts Building, University Tower apartments, and South Library were demolished beyond repair. Two CSUN students died at the off-campus Northridge Meadows apartment complex when their first-floor unit was crushed.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
2
Injured
0
Institution
California State University, Northridge
Public R2 · CA
~27,000 students
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTWebsite
Approximate reconstruction350 chars
Major earthquake. The campus has sustained extensive damage. All buildings are closed. Personnel and students are advised not to enter any campus structure. Stay away from downed power lines and broken gas lines. The University Police Department is establishing a command post at the south parking lot. Listen to KCSN 88.5 FM for further information.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The earthquake struck on a Monday holiday (Martin Luther King Jr. Day) at 4:31 AM PST when the campus was nearly empty, almost certainly preventing mass casualties
CSUN had no electronic mass notification system in 1994; KCSN campus radio served as the primary information channel along with local Los Angeles broadcast media
Parking Structure C, completed in 1991, collapsed completely; had the quake occurred during a class day, casualties would likely have been severe
UPDATEWebsite
Approximate reconstruction392 chars
President Wilson has declared a state of emergency on the Cal State Northridge campus. The Spring 1994 semester is postponed by a minimum of two weeks. All classes scheduled to begin January 24 are canceled. The University will provide updated information as engineering assessments are completed. Faculty, staff, and students should monitor KCSN 88.5 FM and local news for further bulletins.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

President Blenda J. Wilson made the unprecedented decision to delay the entire spring semester rather than relocate classes piecemeal
Approximately 25 classes were eventually held off-campus at Pierce College, LA City College, and UCLA during the recovery period
335 makeshift structures (trailers and tents) were deployed across the CSUN campus to allow the semester to proceed
FOLLOW-UPWebsite
Approximate reconstruction374 chars
The University regrets to confirm the deaths of two CSUN students, Jaime Reyes and Manuel Sandoval, at the Northridge Meadows apartment complex. Counseling services for students, faculty, and staff are available at the temporary Counseling Center being established at the Oviatt Library plaza. The campus community is urged to support one another during this difficult time.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Jaime Reyes (19) and Manuel Sandoval (24) were killed when the first floor of the Northridge Meadows apartment complex collapsed onto them; sixteen people died at that complex
The two students had moved into the complex less than a week before the earthquake, according to family accounts in the Daily Sundial
Northridge Meadows, an off-campus complex about a mile from the CSUN campus, was the deadliest single site of the earthquake
Context

Background

The 1994 Northridge earthquake occurred at 4:31 AM PST on January 17, 1994, with a moment magnitude of 6.7 and an epicenter in the Reseda neighborhood — approximately one mile from the California State University, Northridge campus. The quake's proximity made CSUN the closest U.S. university to any major California seismic event since Stanford and Loma Prieta in 1989. All 58 campus buildings sustained damage; the Fine Arts Building, the University Tower apartments, and the South Library were demolished beyond repair. The collapse of Parking Structure C — its photographs became the iconic image of the earthquake — illustrated the scale of structural failure that occurred even on relatively new construction. Two CSUN students, Jaime Reyes and Manuel Sandoval, died at the off-campus Northridge Meadows apartment complex when its first floor pancaked onto their unit. President Blenda J. Wilson delayed the start of the spring semester by two weeks and arranged for 335 makeshift structures to be deployed across campus, with some classes meeting at Pierce College, LA City College, and UCLA. Total recovery cost reached approximately $406 million. The case is a benchmark for the kind of large-scale infrastructure failure that, post-Clery and post-Virginia Tech, would now trigger immediate emergency notifications via SMS, email, and IPAWS.
Analysis

Key Findings

CSUN's location one mile from the epicenter made it the closest American university to any major California earthquake since 1906 and shaped seismic engineering standards adopted at universities across the West Coast
All 58 campus buildings were damaged; three were demolished beyond repair, an unmatched scale of single-event damage at any U.S. university
The earthquake struck on Martin Luther King Jr. Day at 4:31 AM PST when the campus was nearly empty, almost certainly preventing mass casualties — a fact that shaped CSUN's later emergency planning around 'low-occupancy timing' as an analytical category
President Wilson's two-week semester delay and use of 335 makeshift structures became a template for later large-scale academic continuity planning
Outcome
All 58 campus buildings damaged; three buildings demolished beyond repair. Parking Structure C totally collapsed. Total recovery cost $406 million. Spring 1994 semester delayed two weeks. 335 makeshift structures deployed. Some classes held at Pierce College, LA City College, and UCLA. Two CSUN students killed off-campus.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Source
  2. Official
  3. Student Paper
  4. Official
  5. Official
Tags
earthquakenorthridgenatural-disastercampus-closurepre-clery1994historicalcsunkcsnstructural-collapse
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion