flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Buildings with rocking steel-braced frames are advantageous in earthquakes

Codes and Standards

Buildings with rocking steel-braced frames are advantageous in earthquakes

Research could have implications for seismic codes


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | February 18, 2015
Buildings with rocking steel-braced frames are advantageous in earthquakes

Photo: Thester11 via Wikimedia Commons

Research at Case Western Reserve University has found that buildings that rock during an earthquake and return to plumb would withstand seismic shaking better than structural designs commonly used today in vulnerable zones of California and elsewhere.

Those buildings would also be more easily and cheaply repaired and could be put back into use faster, said Michael Pollino, an assistant civil engineering professor at Case School of Engineering. The computer model research suggests optimal sizes for damping devices and steel yielding devices that dissipate the energy of a quake.

Pollino’s model compares rocking steel-braced frames to current earthquake standards used in low- to mid-rise buildings. "Currently, engineers are designing low-rise structures for an earthquake that has a 10% chance of occurring in a 50-year-lifetime," Pollino said. "We accept there will be damage, but no collapse or loss of life. But what about an event that has a 50% chance of occurring? You may still have to tear the building down afterward.”

Pollino and other researchers are finding advantages to the design, which has not yet made it into practice. He and colleagues are discussing forming a technical committee of civil engineers that would advance the technology into practice. Pollino is now applying for funding to begin physically testing designs in the university's structures laboratory. 

Related Stories

Building Materials | Aug 28, 2015

Structural steel buildings specification available for second public review

Next year's specification open for comments until Sept. 21

Energy Efficiency | Aug 28, 2015

North American Passive House Network e-book explains Passivhaus, net-zero techniques

Free guide includes spotlight on individual projects

Windows and Doors | Aug 28, 2015

Newly formed group challenges Florida building code

Window, door companies oppose provisions that raise costs

Codes and Standards | Aug 28, 2015

New Orleans becoming a model for climate resilience only 10 years after Katrina

The city has moved ahead with resilience strategies that may become a model for other communities

Codes and Standards | Aug 21, 2015

Illinois governor vetoes bill that would restrict condo owners’ rights

Bill would have made it harder to sue for building flaws

Codes and Standards | Aug 21, 2015

Post-Katrina roofing codes creating more resilient buildings on Gulf Coast

Ten years after storm, notable progress on stronger roofs, IBHS says

Smart Buildings | Aug 21, 2015

Federal Alliance for Safe Homes offers plan to strengthen codes for disaster resilience

Some states losing ground on resilience, group says

Codes and Standards | Aug 21, 2015

After disease outbreak, ASHRAE legionella standard adopted in New York

City Council acts after 12 die of legionellosis

Codes and Standards | Aug 13, 2015

Research indicates major earthquake looming for Pacific Northwest

Most structures built before seismic codes instituted; extreme damage predicted

Codes and Standards | Aug 13, 2015

New York City may allow affordable housing developers to ‘double dip’ in subsidies

New York City may allow affordable housing developers to ‘double dip’ in subsidies

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021