A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Systematic Approach for Large-Scale, Rapid, Dilapidation Surveys of Historic Masonry Buildings
Dilapidation surveys may require extensive resources to achieve detailed accounts of damage for intervention purposes or may involve only limited resources but be restricted to an extremely rapid assessment (e.g., post-earthquake, life-safety inspection). Neither provides a holistic, cost-effective approach for evaluating the general health of a large number of structures, as is needed for urban planning, historic designation determination, and risk assessment due to adjacent construction work. To overcome this limitation, index images are introduced for a systematic approach for rapidly conducting large-scale, dilapidation surveys of historic masonry buildings. This method, the University College Dublin Inspection Method (UCDIM), is tested against both a detailed inspection and an alternative rapid approach to determine accuracy and resource intensiveness through its application by three inspectors of various levels of experience to six buildings in the city centre of Dublin, Ireland. The UCDIM provided a damage ranking of ρ = 0.94 for all inspectors, regardless of experience, except when painted or rendered facades were included. The UCDIM, compared with detailed inspection, provided a high level of reliability, cost-savings of approximately 90% and several months of time savings since interior access was not required.
Systematic Approach for Large-Scale, Rapid, Dilapidation Surveys of Historic Masonry Buildings
Dilapidation surveys may require extensive resources to achieve detailed accounts of damage for intervention purposes or may involve only limited resources but be restricted to an extremely rapid assessment (e.g., post-earthquake, life-safety inspection). Neither provides a holistic, cost-effective approach for evaluating the general health of a large number of structures, as is needed for urban planning, historic designation determination, and risk assessment due to adjacent construction work. To overcome this limitation, index images are introduced for a systematic approach for rapidly conducting large-scale, dilapidation surveys of historic masonry buildings. This method, the University College Dublin Inspection Method (UCDIM), is tested against both a detailed inspection and an alternative rapid approach to determine accuracy and resource intensiveness through its application by three inspectors of various levels of experience to six buildings in the city centre of Dublin, Ireland. The UCDIM provided a damage ranking of ρ = 0.94 for all inspectors, regardless of experience, except when painted or rendered facades were included. The UCDIM, compared with detailed inspection, provided a high level of reliability, cost-savings of approximately 90% and several months of time savings since interior access was not required.
Systematic Approach for Large-Scale, Rapid, Dilapidation Surveys of Historic Masonry Buildings
Clarke, Julie A. (author) / Laefer, Debra F. (author)
International Journal of Architectural Heritage ; 8 ; 290-310
2014-03-04
21 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
historic , masonry , buildings , dilapidation , survey , condition , assessment , urban , planning , risk
Pitfalls of dilapidation schedules
British Library Online Contents | 2003
Wiley | 2010
|Wiley | 2005
|Rapid Seismic Assessment Procedure of Masonry Buildings with Historic Value
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2015
|Rapid Seismic Assessment Procedure of Masonry Buildings with Historic Value
Springer Verlag | 2015
|