On multi-hazard considerations in design of structures
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
12-1-2010
Abstract
Civil infrastructure is vital to economic development and critical to response and recovery after extreme events. However, they are also quite vulnerable to natural and man-made hazards such as earthquakes, storm surge, fire and terrorist threats; especially highway bridges. Therefore, there is a need to move toward multihazard design methods of structures. A multi-hazard approach to design of structures will require emphasis on vertical strength and stability to ensure collapse prevention. Consequently, structural elements' response in the vertical direction and their connection details will require special consideration. Collapse of an intermediate support (due to fire or terrorist acts), buoyancy pressures from an storm surge (such as hurricanes and typhoons) or vertical motion of earthquake ground motion all exert demands on structural components (such as building transfer girders or bridge deck superstructure), bearings, and load transfer mechanism to the foundation that are not considered within the existing design guidelines. The commonality among various hazards and critical parameters are highlighted through specific research and design recommendations.
Identifier
84867144565 (Scopus)
ISBN
[9781617388446]
Publication Title
9th US National and 10th Canadian Conference on Earthquake Engineering 2010 Including Papers from the 4th International Tsunami Symposium
First Page
4829
Last Page
4838
Volume
6
Recommended Citation
Carlson, N. and Saadeghvaziri, M. A., "On multi-hazard considerations in design of structures" (2010). Faculty Publications. 5904.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/5904
