A Contribution to a UHS-Based Seismic Risk Assessment in Croatia—A Case Study for the City of Osijek
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Proposed Methodology
3. The Seismic Hazard Evaluation
4. Exposure
4.1. Review of Existing Building Taxonomies
4.2. Predominant Building Typologies for the City of Osijek
- -
- gathering the data from the archives of some public institutions or companies, such as hospitals, schools, kindergartens, etc.
- -
- going to the site and analyzing the buildings.
- -
- unreinforced masonry structures (URM), flexible floors (old bricks)
- -
- unreinforced masonry structures, rigid floors
- -
- confined masonry structures
- -
- reinforced-concrete frame structures (RC)
- -
- shear walls, built without taking into consideration earthquake-resistant design.
5. Seismic Vulnerability Assessment for Civil Engineering Structures
5.1. Existing Seismic Vulnerability Assessment Methods
- -
- vulnerability as one of the main factors in the seismic risk analysis,
- -
- vulnerability as a major factor in the development of earthquake scenarios,
- -
- the basis for establishing a risk reduction strategy for buildings or the classification of risk elements,
- -
- base data for the creation of intensity scales (e.g., EMS-98 scale [40], which refers explicitly to seismic exposure).
5.2. Experiences Obtained by Provided Seismic Vulnerability Assessment Methods in Croatia
6. Results
6.1. Selected Characteristics of Buildings for the Database
- -
- number of stories
- -
- material type
- -
- lateral load resistant type
- -
- elevation irregularity
- -
- plan irregularity
- -
- ground type
- -
- changes in vertical strength and/or stiffness (e.g., soft stories)
- -
- short column (applicable to RC frame structures only).
- -
- structural system
- -
- year of construction
- -
- state of preservation
- -
- the regularity of the floor plan
- -
- regularity along with the height
- -
- number of stories
- -
- story height and total building height
- -
- the material used for the construction of the walls and the type of the floor structure
- -
- position within the block
- -
- building size
- -
- floor area and gross floor area of the building
- -
- ground type
- -
- purpose of the building.
- -
- cadastral parcel number
- -
- street name and house number.
6.2. Provided Seismic Vulnerability Assessments Based on the Selected Building Characteristics
- SPI = 0–10 indicates low priority
- SPI = 10–20 indicates a medium priority
- SPI = 20–30 indicates a high priority
- SPI > 30 potentially hazardous
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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City Name | 1950 | 1982 | 1990 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
50 yrs. | 100 yrs. | 200 yrs. | 500 yrs. | 1000 yrs. | 10,000 yrs. | |||
Zagreb | VIII–IX | VIII | VII | VII–VIII | VIII | VIII–IX | IX | IX |
Rijeka | IX | VII | VI | VII–VIII | VIII | VIII | VIII–IX | IX |
Split | VII | VI | VII | VII | VII | VIII | VIII | VIII |
Osijek | VIII | VII | VI | VII | VII | VIII | VIII | VIII |
Zadar | IX | VIII | VI | VII | VII | VIII | VIII | VIII |
City Name | 1990 | 2011 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 yrs. | 500 yrs. | Tr = 95 yrs. | Tr = 475 yrs. | |||
Rock | Soil | Rock | Soil | |||
Zagreb | 0.081–0.199 | 0.159–0.388 | 0.12–0.14 | 0.168–0.196 | 0.22–0.26 | 0.308–0.364 |
Rijeka | 0.081–0.199 | 0.159–0.199 | 0.1 | 0.14 | 0.18–0.20 | 0.252–0.28 |
Split | 0.081–0.102 | 0.159–0.199 | 0.12 | 0.168 | 0.22 | 0.308 |
Osijek | 0.081–0.102 | 0.159–0.199 | 0.04–0.06 | 0.072–0.108 | 0.10–0.12 | 0.18–0.216 |
Zadar | 0.081–0.102 | 0.159–0.199 | 0.08 | 0.112 | 0.18 | 0.252 |
Period of Construction | Number | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|
built before 1919 | 112,217 | 7.5 |
built between 1919–1945 | 84,963 | 5.7 |
built between 1946–1960 | 138,858 | 9.3 |
built between 1961–1970 | 288,563 | 19.3 |
built between 1971–1980 | 325,203 | 21.7 |
built between 1981–1990 | 247,084 | 16.5 |
built between 1991–2000 | 129,687 | 8.7 |
built between 2001–2005 | 70,463 | 4.7 |
built from 2006 | 73,072 | 4.9 |
unknown | 24,640 | 1.6 |
unfinished | 1808 | 0.1 |
total | 1,496,558 | 100 |
Age Distribution | before 1948 | 1948–1964 | 1964–1981 | 1981–2005 | 2005–2012 | 2010–Today |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Seismic regulation (design standards) | - | - | 1st earthquake design regulation 1 | Regulation 1981 [18] | Pre-standards | Eurocode 8 [22] |
The common type of construction | Stone and brick masonry buildings with wooden floors | Brick masonry with reinforced concrete floors | Masonry with RC floors (houses), confined masonry (residential buildings), and pre-code RC frames | Reinforced concrete buildings, confined masonry buildings |
Number of Dwellings | Area in m2 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Osjecko-Baranjska County | 138,252 | 11,054,777 | |
Osijek | 51,123 | 3,853,094 |
Method | Disadvantages |
---|---|
Empirical | - specific to particular seismo—tectonic, geotechnical, and built environments - errors in classification of building damages - intensity—uncertainty caused by subjectivity and discrete scale - lack of data for larger, rarer earthquakes - available databases capturing earthquake damage data may be incomplete or of poor quality - unable to account for specific structural details and the strengthening of buildings - Damage probability matrices (—based primarily on the observations of damages during past earthquakes may sometimes not be applicable for the prediction of damages during future seismic events. - practices of building construction often change significantly after disastrous earthquakes—the performance of new buildings cannot be then represented by existing probability matrices - vulnerability classes are defined for different building typologies based only on the material used in construction and on the structural system (and in part on the particularities of earthquake-resistant design) while neglecting the height range (number of stories) |
Analytical | - the significant computational effort is needed while there are limitations in modeling capabilities - involve assumptions that can cause significant discrepancies in results - variation in results, depending on the use of different modeling techniques, input data, and ways to assign characteristics to the model |
Mean Damage Grade Intervals | Most Probable Damage State | EMS-98 Damage Grade |
---|---|---|
0–0.5 | None | D0 |
0.5–1.5 | Slight | D1 (Grade 1) |
1.5–2.5 | Moderate | D2 (Grade 2) |
2.5–3.5 | Substantial to heavy | D3 (Grade 3) |
3.5–4.5 | Very heavy | D4 (Grade 4) |
4.5–5.0 | Destruction | D5 (Grade 5) |
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Pavić, G.; Hadzima-Nyarko, M.; Bulajić, B. A Contribution to a UHS-Based Seismic Risk Assessment in Croatia—A Case Study for the City of Osijek. Sustainability 2020, 12, 1796. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051796
Pavić G, Hadzima-Nyarko M, Bulajić B. A Contribution to a UHS-Based Seismic Risk Assessment in Croatia—A Case Study for the City of Osijek. Sustainability. 2020; 12(5):1796. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051796
Chicago/Turabian StylePavić, Gordana, Marijana Hadzima-Nyarko, and Borko Bulajić. 2020. "A Contribution to a UHS-Based Seismic Risk Assessment in Croatia—A Case Study for the City of Osijek" Sustainability 12, no. 5: 1796. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051796
APA StylePavić, G., Hadzima-Nyarko, M., & Bulajić, B. (2020). A Contribution to a UHS-Based Seismic Risk Assessment in Croatia—A Case Study for the City of Osijek. Sustainability, 12(5), 1796. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051796