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ASCE issues first tsunami-safe building standards

Codes and Standards

ASCE issues first tsunami-safe building standards

The new standards will become part of international building code.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | October 14, 2016

Pixabay Public Domain

For the first time in the U.S., national construction standards will address the risk of tsunamis.

The American Society of Civil Engineers has developed a new edition of ASCE 7-16, the first to include a chapter on tsunami hazards, in addition to chapters on seismic, wind, and flood hazards. The tsunami standards are only for steel-reinforced concrete buildings in ā€œinundation zones.ā€ They will not apply to wood-frame structures.

The committee that developed the new standard began work in late 2010, a few months before the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami that devastated Japan.

ā€œWe werenā€™t reacting,ā€ according to Dan Cox of Oregon State University, a professor of civil and construction engineering in the OSU College of Engineering, and one of about 20 engineers on the ASCE committee that developed them. ā€œWe were trying to do this in advance. After the 2011 event, interest accelerated regarding how to build things safely in a tsunami zone, and it was important that the subcommittee contained people familiar with how codes work and academic researchers who can bring in the latest advances.ā€

The tsunami standards will have the most impact on engineers designing and building structures less than about five stories in height. Above five stories, even-stronger building codes will take precedence over codes to protect smaller structures from tsunamis. The new standards can also be used on retrofit projects.

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