The GeoNet building instrumentation programme
Item
Title (Dublin Core)
en-US
The GeoNet building instrumentation programme
Description (Dublin Core)
en-US
In New Zealand, the performance of instrumented structures has rarely been tested by earthquake events with design-level motions to enable verification of the code design recommendations and related design assumptions. In the Darfield event, Rutherford building at the University of Canterbury was the only instrumented building that recorded its earthquake response. Lessons from overseas earthquakes, in particular the 1994 Northridge event, have demonstrated the invaluable use of information from instrumented buildings. In order to derive similar benefits from any future New Zealand events, steps were initiated to install modern digital accelerographs in structures. The new building instrumentation programme aims to install earthquake strong-motion instruments within up to 30 structures (mainly buildings and bridges) across New Zealand so as to measure their responses to future earthquake-induced ground motions. This article describes the objective of the instrumentation programme, highlighting the expected benefits to various end-users, the progress made so far and the future scope of the ongoing programme.
Creator (Dublin Core)
Uma, S.R.
King, Andrew
Cousins, Jim
Gledhill, Ken
Publisher (Dublin Core)
en-US
New Zealand Society for Earthquake Engineering
Date (Dublin Core)
2011-03-31
Type (Dublin Core)
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
en-US
Article
Format (Dublin Core)
application/pdf
Identifier (Dublin Core)
https://bulletin.nzsee.org.nz/index.php/bnzsee/article/view/246
10.5459/bnzsee.44.1.53-63
Source (Dublin Core)
en-US
Bulletin of the New Zealand Society for Earthquake Engineering; Vol 44 No 1 (2011); 53-63
2324-1543
1174-9857
Language (Dublin Core)
eng
Relation (Dublin Core)
https://bulletin.nzsee.org.nz/index.php/bnzsee/article/view/246/233
Rights (Dublin Core)
en-US
Copyright (c) 2011 S.R. Uma, Andrew King, Jim Cousins, Ken Gledhill
en-US
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0



