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Encyclopedia > Urban seismic risk
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A mixed group of structures

Urban seismic risk is special subset of the general term seismic risk. It involves the specific problems of cities when they are subjected to earthquakes. Many problems can be solved with good earthquake construction.


Toronto, Ontario, Canada is used as an example city in this article.


Cities are a mixture of old and new construction as in this picture. Note the old brick building mixed in with the new highrises, and the famous Toronto CN Tower. Similar to methodologies used in nuclear reactors, a seismic walkdown of the city is the best way to identify vulnerabilities and possible places for improvement.


Toronto is located on the shores of Lake Ontario, the site of much microseismicity. [1] (http://www.gp.uwo.ca/) Historic records indicate that there is a strong possibility for a rare, strong earthquake, as with many cities in the world.


Most new construction complies with strict building codes, and buildings designed for loads that go beyond seismic. For example, Toronto's highrises are, for the most part, firmly situated on bedrock (for settlement reasons), and are designed for hurricane wind loads. They are not expected to have any problems structurally during an earthquake, although people may feel quite queasy from the sway.

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Toronto's elevated expressway

Unfortunately, there are many places where the seismic risk (for damage) is quite high. Old brick buildings on poor soils are highly vulnerable to earthquake damage. Some brick chimneys in Toronto have absolutely no mortar, and you can see through them. This picture shows an elevated expressway on filled land. Although there may not be total collapse, there will be sufficient damage to incapacitate the structure. Problems increase if there is the possibility for soil or earthquake liquefaction.


Finally, there is the problem with interiors. Many items such as suspended ceilings and light fixtures have almost no seismic ruggedness. Similarly warehouse stores where heavy merchandise is stacked in narrow racks up to the ceiling can also become hazardous in an earthquake.


External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Seismic risk analysis in thirty municipalities of the Etnean conurbation. (1731 words)
In a risk area such as the Sicilian one, where the intervals between events is still unforeesable, and in any case rather protracted, the only feasable approach to all prevention actions must take into account the needs of a culture that must live together with seismic risk at a humanly and economically acceptable cost.
Seismic risk can be defined as being the product of the location’s seismic danger multiplied by the vulnerability of building structures (be they single buildings or building networks), and by the damages caused to things and persons.
Urban structures improvements must be based on the interrelation of three scales of intervention, which will provide : - a general frame-work of the necessary mesures; - a set of "objective" intervention priorities;- a cost plan;- a set of choices in function of the economic resources.
seismic risk: Definition and Much More from Answers.com (801 words)
Although the term seismic risk is occasionally used in a general sense to mean the potential for both the occurrence of natural phenomena and the economic and life loss associated with earthquakes, it is useful to differentiate between the concepts of seismic hazard and seismic risk.
Seismic hazard may be defined as any physical phenomena that result either from surface faulting during shallow earthquakes or from the ground shaking resulting from an earthquake and that may produce adverse effects on human activities.
Lastly, insurance companies routinely employ estimates of seismic risk in their operations, to determine appropriate insurance rates, to monitor over-accumulation of policies in a small area, and to purchase reinsurance.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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