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Thrust Areas

Key tasks/Deliverables

 

Start

Finish

FP3.1  Methodologies for earthquake-vulnerable buildings

1. Develop alternative methods for improved seismic assessment of existing buildings with focus on highest life safety risks

1/01/2016

31/12/2019

2. Develop and test  innovative retrofit solutions for earthquake-vulnerable buildings

1/01/2016

31/12/2019

FP3.2 Economics of earthquake vulnerable buildings

1. Assess impacts of earthquakes and earthquake-related policies on property and rental markets

1/01/2016

31/12/2019

2. Assess the utility of different financial and economic tools for decision making related to existing buildings

1/01/2017

31/12/2020

3. Investigate the role of insurance in the addressing earthquake-vulnerable buildings

1/01/2018

31/12/2020

FP3.3 Societal perceptions and Policy

1. Investigate public understanding of earthquake risk and mitigation options and their spatial and temporal variations

1/01/2017

31/12/2019

2. Investigate the role of communities of practice in shaping earthquake prone building policy at a national to local level.

1/01/2017

31/12/2019

3. Develop innovative methods for community participation in the development of policies and initiatives to address earthquake-vulnerable buildings

1/01/2018

31/12/2020

 

2018 RfP Information

Next Flagship RfP Collaboration Meeting: TBD

Draft Flagship Programme 2018:

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RfP Projects are being sought in the following areas:

 

Opportunity 

The vast majority of earthquake-related deaths occur due to building collapse, and therefore the most direct way to minimise fatalities and injuries is to first identify then remediate or demolish the nation’s earthquake-prone building stock. In March 2014, the Earthquake-prone Buildings Bill passed its first reading in Parliament, with the express purpose to establish a nationally consistent approach to addressing the risk posed by earthquake-prone buildings (EPB). Considering the number of EPB throughout NZ, the high costs of remediation, and the heritage value of many EPB, this legislation has broad implications for the NZ economy, owners of earthquake-prone buildings, and all members of the community.

There is a window of opportunity for QuakeCoRE researchers to significantly inform this national debate with leading-edge multi-disciplinary research that seeks a balance between heritage, safety, and economics. This Flagship will pursue three interconnected families of research needs all linked by case studies. Conventional economic decision-support tools will be advanced in order to address the current failure to recognise the complexities of low-frequency high-consequence events with community-wide impacts and the value of cultural heritage. Drawing upon multidisciplinary community datasets, the scope of the EPB ‘problem’ in NZ will be quantified rigorously for the first time. This ‘baseline’ will then be used in the development of robust multi-scale models for prototypical building systems, providing an improved understanding of their seismic response characteristics and reduce current excessively conservative structural assessments which may lead to unnecessary demolition or overly-conservative remediation strategies. Finally, QuakeCoRE will build on its proven track record related to the assessment and mitigation of URM buildings to develop cost-effective and aesthetically-acceptable methods for seismic strengthening of pre-1970’s concrete structures and other non-ductile buildings. These efforts will be linked using community case studies for Auckland and Wanganui.

Impact

The vast majority of earthquake-related deaths occur due to building collapse, and therefore the most direct way to minimise fatalities and injuries is to first identify then remediate or demolish t

Funded Projects


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