Robustness of Multi-Storey Timber Buildings
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Bibliographic Details
Author(s): |
Hercend Mpidi Bita
(University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada)
Thomas Tannert (University of Northern British Columbia, Prince George, BC, Canada) |
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Medium: | conference paper | ||||
Language(s): | English | ||||
Conference: | IABSE Symposium: Engineering the Future, Vancouver, Canada, 21-23 September 2017 | ||||
Published in: | IABSE Symposium Vancouver 2017 | ||||
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Page(s): | 1934-1941 | ||||
Total no. of pages: | 8 | ||||
Year: | 2017 | ||||
DOI: | 10.2749/vancouver.2017.1934 | ||||
Abstract: |
This paper investigates the probability of disproportionate collapse for a nine-storey mass-timber building designed for gravity and lateral loads. This is a static analysis which accounts for both geometric and material nonlinearities. Considering 32 different scenarios, the proposed building is subjected to removal of ground floor columns, one or two at a time, to compute the reliability index. As limit state functions, the results take into account the residual capacity of the building, in terms of bending moment resistance and shear stress within Cross-laminated timber panels, as well as the resulting deformations. Results indicate that failure is dictated by the imposed deflections rather than the capacity of the timber elements. The investigation shows that the proposed building does not have sufficient robustness to redistribute the load to the undamaged part of the building after the considered removal scenarios. |
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Keywords: |
progressive collapse extreme events disproportionate collapse structural integrity Flat-Plates System Mid-Rise Timber Buildings
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