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Understanding Disaster-Resistant Structures

Blog | January 12th, 2018

Ill-conceived fallacies plague the construction industry. Take one example, the concept of a truly disaster-resistant structure. We could erroneously say that a super-hardened structural steel frame will thwart a major tremor, but is that true? Not exactly, for rigid metals are prone to fracturing events. Following that same line of reasoning, a poorly heat treated metal framework will not hold because the shaking ground is deforming the structure.

Material-Based Structural Resiliency

As uniformly rigid as that hypothetically hardened steel alloy would be, its solid profile would be transformed into an unstable mechanical pile of fracturing parts when an earthquake’s tremors propagated upwards from the ground. Like the old maxim, the theory that a willow bends while the oak tree breaks, structural ductility is a desirable attribute here, one that’s become a core precept in disaster-resistant structural science. Alloy ductility and strength are the ultimate pairings here, according to many computer simulations.

Elastomer-Buttressed Foundations 

Again, the goal is to dampen the massive vibrations before they shake the building apart. Material ductility represents a partial solution, but that ground is still caught in an upheaval. Huge elastic braces and specially engineered suspension systems are being added to building complexes when they’re constructed in a known earthquake zone. They work in concert with the reinforced steel, tremor-resistant concrete, and added diagonal steel beams to help the structure ride out the seismic event.

The Science of Disaster-Resistance 

Every day, new computer models are created to test different environmental disasters. In some cases, added steel beams and specially strengthened joints make the difference. There are competing philosophies, however, just as there are different types of seismic events. Because of that fact, there are contrasting solutions in place around the globe. In Japan, there are proprietary structural joints that shear when building oscillations reach a critical juncture. The incorporated shearing mechanism stops the structure from experiencing the severe side-to-side motions that are known to cripple a building’s steel backbone.

There are many disaster-resistant structures under construction. They equip ground-anchored foundations with oversized elastic bricks. Then, as the structure is erected, strong but ductile steel beams enter the scene. They’re buttressed by frangible joints or cleverly reinforced framework intersections. Concrete and rebar clothe the structure. These poured and tied structural assets are built to absorb or disseminate the shock. Finally, when the floods come, helical anchors and other steel-edged assets are on hand to facilitate the drainage process. By the way, while this misfortune holds sway, automated systems are busily turning off the gas and isolating the still active electrical systems.

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