Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Response of three Athens metro underground structures in the 1999 Parnitha earthquake
AbstractThe Ms 5.9 earthquake of 1999 produced valuable records in three underground structures, as follows: (a) in the just completed cut-and-cover station of Sepolia two accelerographs recorded the free-field and the station-base motion; (b) in the still under-construction tunnelled station of Monastiraki an accelerograph recorded the ground surface motion, and (c) in the nearby Kerameikos station, abandoned for non-technical reasons, the temporary prestressed-anchor piled (PAP) wall was still in place and produced a record of total seismic displacement at its top. Directly or indirectly utilising these records, the article outlines the results of numerical analyses aimed at ‘recovering’ the complete seismic response of the three underground structures. Particular emphasis is given to Sepolia station, where the developed accelerations (with PGA of about 0.17g at the station base and 0.43g at the station roof) are shown to have been almost exactly equal to the design accelerations according to the seismic code under the assumption that the station responds as an aboveground structure. The successful performance of the two temporary structures, in Monastiraki and Kerameikos (which had been designed against minimal acceleration levels but experienced ground-surface high-frequency accelerations of the order of 0.50g) is explained through dynamic response analyses.
Response of three Athens metro underground structures in the 1999 Parnitha earthquake
AbstractThe Ms 5.9 earthquake of 1999 produced valuable records in three underground structures, as follows: (a) in the just completed cut-and-cover station of Sepolia two accelerographs recorded the free-field and the station-base motion; (b) in the still under-construction tunnelled station of Monastiraki an accelerograph recorded the ground surface motion, and (c) in the nearby Kerameikos station, abandoned for non-technical reasons, the temporary prestressed-anchor piled (PAP) wall was still in place and produced a record of total seismic displacement at its top. Directly or indirectly utilising these records, the article outlines the results of numerical analyses aimed at ‘recovering’ the complete seismic response of the three underground structures. Particular emphasis is given to Sepolia station, where the developed accelerations (with PGA of about 0.17g at the station base and 0.43g at the station roof) are shown to have been almost exactly equal to the design accelerations according to the seismic code under the assumption that the station responds as an aboveground structure. The successful performance of the two temporary structures, in Monastiraki and Kerameikos (which had been designed against minimal acceleration levels but experienced ground-surface high-frequency accelerations of the order of 0.50g) is explained through dynamic response analyses.
Response of three Athens metro underground structures in the 1999 Parnitha earthquake
Gazetas, G. (Autor:in) / Gerolymos, N. (Autor:in) / Anastasopoulos, I. (Autor:in)
Soil Dynamics and Earthquake Engineering ; 25 ; 617-633
01.11.2004
17 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Response of three Athens metro underground structures in the 1999 Parnitha earthquake
Online Contents | 2005
|Response of three Athens metro underground structures in the 1999 Parnitha earthquake
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2005
|Response of three Athens metro underground structures in the 1999 Parnitha earthquake
British Library Online Contents | 2005
|Response of a Stadium to the 1999 Athens Earthquake
Online Contents | 2011
|HAUPTAUFSÄTZE - The earthquake of Athens, September 1999
Online Contents | 2000
|