Hospitals Eleven hospitals suffered structural damage and were damaged or rendered unusable. As a result, the state legislature enacted Senate Bill 1953 to amend the
Hospital Facilities Seismic Safety Act to require all hospitals in California to ensure that their acute care units and emergency rooms would be in earthquake-resistant buildings by January 1, 2005. Most were unable to meet this deadline and belatedly came into compliance during the 2010s.
Television, movie, and music productions The production of movies and television shows was disrupted. At the time of the quake, before dawn on Monday morning, the
Warner Bros. film
Murder in the First (with
Christian Slater,
Kevin Bacon, and
Gary Oldman) was being filmed only from the epicenter. Production came to a halt. The main courtroom set was in shambles. The building containing the set was later "red tagged" as unsafe due to the damage it sustained. The
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "
Profit and Loss" was being filmed at the time, and actors
Armin Shimerman and Edward Wiley left the
Paramount Pictures lot in full
Ferengi and
Cardassian makeup, respectively. The
season five episode of
Seinfeld entitled "
The Pie" was due to begin shooting on January 17 before stage sets were damaged. Also, ABC's
General Hospital set at
ABC Television Center suffered partial structural collapse and water damage. An earthquake scene was written in the screenplay of ''
Wes Craven's New Nightmare'' and the earthquake occurred in the middle of its production timeline. Subsequently, the production company,
New Line Cinema, incorporated real-life footage of the earthquake aftermath into the final cut. Some archives of film and entertainment programming were also affected. For example, the original master films for the 1960s sitcom
My Living Doll were destroyed. In January 1994
Michael Jackson planned to record his new album
HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I but due to the earthquake, which terrified Jackson, they were moved to
New York at
The Hit Factory.
Transportation at Gavin Canyon Portions of a number of major roads and freeways, including
Interstate 10 over
La Cienega Boulevard, and the interchanges of
Interstate 5 with
California State Route 14,
118, and
Interstate 210, were closed because of structural failure or collapse.
James E. Roberts was chief bridge engineer with
Caltrans and was placed in charge of the seismic retrofit program for
Caltrans until his death in 2006. Rail service was briefly interrupted, with full Amtrak and expanded Metrolink service resuming in stages in the days after the quake. Interruptions to road transport caused Metrolink to experiment with service to
Camarillo in February and
Oxnard in April, which continues today as the
Ventura County Line, and extended the
Antelope Valley Line almost ten years ahead of schedule. Six new stations opened in six weeks. Metrolink leased equipment from Amtrak, San Francisco's
Caltrain, and Toronto, Canada's
GO Transit to handle the sudden onslaught of passengers. Amtrak ceased service in the
Pasadena Subdivision following structural damage to a rail bridge in
Arcadia and redirected all rail traffic through
Riverside and
Fullerton. All MTA bus lines operated service with detours and delays on the day of the quake.
Los Angeles International Airport and other airports in the area were also shut down as a two-hour precaution, including Burbank–Glendale–Pasadena Airport (now
Hollywood Burbank Airport) and
Van Nuys Airport, which is near the epicenter, where the control tower suffered from radar failure and panel collapse. The airport was reopened in stages after the quake.
California State University, Northridge California State University, Northridge (CSUN), was the closest university to the epicenter. Many campus buildings were heavily damaged and a parking structure collapsed. Many classes were moved to temporary structures. Much of the campus infrastructure was damaged and there were multiple fires and explosions throughout the campus. The earthquake damaged several buildings and destroyed all communications, including telephone lines, and caused computer systems to shut down. Two CSUN students died at the Northridge Meadows Complex along with 14 other residents.
Campus damage All 58 buildings on campus sustained significant damage, resulting in a $406 million recovery effort. The Oviatt Library experienced both interior and exterior damage, but the overall frame of the central part of the building remained stable, allowing student use to continue. In the Science Complex, Building #1 and #2 suffered fire damage while the bridges connecting buildings #3 and #4 were closed and named unstable. The University Tower apartments, Fine Arts Building and the South Library were damaged beyond repair and demolished. Photographs of the recently constructed Parking Structure C which collapsed became synonymous with the earthquake's effects on the university. Some 25 classes were held at Pierce College, LA City College and
UCLA, while others were outdoors or in trailer buildings. The campus was unable to use any of its classrooms because of the damage the buildings sustained. CSUN President Dr.
Blenda Wilson assured the rental of temporary structures to be placed in available spaces throughout the campus. An estimated $350 million (equivalent to $ million today) was used to supply the number of trailers and domes which housed classes and administration offices. Enrollment dropped by approximately 1,000 students, leaving some homeless as dormitories were closed due to damage that rendered them unsafe and which required repair.
External resources The seismic event led to millions of dollars' worth of damage resulting in a sharp drop in student enrollment. CSUN received financial assistance for its efforts in reestablishing the damaged buildings with monetary gifts from the McCarthy Foundation, the Common Wealth Fund, and the Union Bank Foundation. In addition, the campus received a $23,000 check (equivalent to $ today) from the
Los Angeles Times Valley Edition for the journalism department. CSUN also received assistance from government agencies FEMA and OES to support the recovery effort and serve the needs of the local community. UCLA's Westwood campus opened their doors and allowed CSUN students to use their libraries while providing shuttle buses to and from the university.
Entertainment and sports Universal Studios Hollywood shut down the
Earthquake attraction, based on the 1974 motion picture blockbuster,
Earthquake. It was closed for the second time since the
Loma Prieta earthquake.
Angel Stadium of Anaheim (then known as Anaheim Stadium) suffered some damage when the scoreboard fell into the seats,
Other buildings Numerous
Los Angeles museums, including the
Art Deco Building in
Hollywood, were closed, as were numerous city shopping malls.
Gazzarri's nightclub suffered irreparable damage and had to be torn down. The city of
Santa Monica suffered significant damage. Many multifamily apartment buildings in Santa Monica were
yellow-tagged and
red-tagged. An especially hard hit area was between Santa Monica Canyon and Saint John's Hospital, a linear corridor that suffered a significant amount of property damage. The City of Santa Monica provided assistance to landlords dealing with repairs so tenants could return home as soon as possible. In Valencia, the
California Institute of the Arts experienced heavy damage, with classes relocated to a nearby Lockheed test facility for the remainder of 1994. The
Los Angeles Unified School District closed local schools throughout the area, which reopened one week later. UCLA and other local universities were also shut down. The
University of Southern California suffered some structural damage to several older campus buildings, but classes were conducted as scheduled. Pierce College suffered $2 million in damages, the most affected of the nine Los Angeles community colleges. ==Aftermath==