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Probabilistic damage assessment of buildings due to induced seismicity

  • S.I.: Induced Seismicity and Its Effects on Built Environment
  • Published:
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Abstract

Natural gas production in the Groningen field in the Netherlands is causing induced earthquakes that have raised concerns regarding the safety of the local population given that the exposed building stock (which is predominantly unreinforced masonry residential housing) has not been designed and constructed considering seismic loading. Significant effort has been invested to date in assessing the safety risk of these buildings within a probabilistic framework. This paper describes the efforts that have since been made to extend this framework for probabilistic damage assessment of the buildings, for slight non-structural, slight structural and moderate structural damage. Fragility functions for non-structural damage have been developed considering the observed damage from damage reports, rather than from damage claims due to a number of issues with the latter, as described herein. Structural damage has been estimated using analytical models that have been calibrated through extensive in situ data collection and experimental testing. The probabilistic damage assessment is presented in terms of F-N curves, which plot the annual frequency of exceedance against number of buildings reaching each damage state.

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(note the location of Groningen city has been signalled in both plots to aid comparison)

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Notes

  1. https://platform.openquake.org/vulnerability.

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Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to TNO for providing access to the geo-referenced damage data, and special thanks are due to Chris Geurts and Huibert Borsje. The Groningen probabilistic seismic hazard and risk model described herein has been developed in collaboration with Julian Bommer, Stephen Bourne and Steve Oates, whose contributions to the study presented herein, through data contribution, model checking and many fruitful discussions, are thus gratefully acknowledged. Many of the details of the fragility model described in this paper were presented to an Assurance Panel comprising Jack Baker, Ihsan Engin Bal, Matjaz Dolsek, Paolo Franchin, Ron Hamburger, Nico Luco, Markus Schotanus and Dimitrios Vamvatsikos, whose valuable feedback and recommendations are thus gratefully acknowledged. Discussions, at different stages of this work, with Guido Magenes, Raphael Steenbergen, Peter Stafford, Iunio Iervolino, Francesco Graziotti, and Andrea Penna, were also very beneficial. Further, the contributions of the exposure model team at Arup, of the field/laboratory testing team at Eucentre, and of the structural modelling teams at Arup, Eucentre and Mosayk, are gratefully acknowledged. The authors would finally like to thank the two anonmymous reviewers for their constructive comments which helped improve the clarity of this manuscript.

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Correspondence to Helen Crowley.

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Crowley, H., Pinho, R., van Elk, J. et al. Probabilistic damage assessment of buildings due to induced seismicity. Bull Earthquake Eng 17, 4495–4516 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10518-018-0462-1

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