SCIRT Standard Details Combined
Articles, UC QuakeStudies
A paper which indexes standard SCIRT details and CSS details including all SCIRT details.
A paper which indexes standard SCIRT details and CSS details including all SCIRT details.
A technical guideline which defines SCIRT Delivery Team requirements for as-built field surveying and attribute information.
A presentation prepared for the 2016 New Zealand Spatial Excellence Awards: Category: Award for Technical Excellence.
An award submission nominating SCIRT for the 2016 New Zealand Spatial Excellence Awards: Category: Award for Technical Excellence.
A flowchart which illustrates where the G-File was used throughout the life cycle of asset data collection, processing and delivery.
A document which stipulates SCIRT's minimum standard for managing the risks arising from working around services.
A document which sets out the 12d standards at SCIRT.
A report reviewing pipe installation specifications and recommending alternatives that could improve standard specifications.
A report detailing the Liquefaction Trial, the observations, and discussions of the trial interpretation and findings.
A video filmed during the Liquefaction Trial detonation and immediately following (run time approximately one minute).
A guideline to inform designers of the pipe profilometer operation, including requesting profile surveys, standards and assessments of the survey results.
A tool which outlines the eight critical risks applicable to the SCIRT programme, and sets out minimum standards for addressing these risks. This tool was created in 2014.
A plan which aims to ensure the SCIRT programme complies with set specifications, design and industry quality standards. The first version of this plan was produced on 20 July 2011.
A presentation which explains that NZTA have adopted SCIRT's approach to utilities management and sets out the reasons why. This presentation was created in 2015.
A document which describes how SCIRT led the co-ordination of its huge repair programme with those of other utilities.
A video of a presentation by Dr Scott Miles during the Community Resilience Stream of the 2016 People in Disasters Conference. The presentation is titled, "A Community Wellbeing Centric Approach to Disaster Resilience".The abstract for this presentation reads as follows: A higher bar for advancing community disaster resilience can be set by conducting research and developing capacity-building initiatives that are based on understanding and monitoring community wellbeing. This presentation jumps off from this view, arguing that wellbeing is the most important concept for improving the disaster resilience of communities. The presentation uses examples from the 2010 and 2011 Canterbury earthquakes to illustrate the need and effectiveness of a wellbeing-centric approach. While wellbeing has been integrated in the Canterbury recovery process, community wellbeing and resilience need to guide research and planning. The presentation unpacks wellbeing in order to synthesize it with other concepts that are relevant to community disaster resilience. Conceptualizing wellbeing as either the opportunity for or achievement of affiliation, autonomy, health, material needs, satisfaction, and security is common and relatively accepted across non-disaster fields. These six variables can be systematically linked to fundamental elements of resilience. The wellbeing variables are subject to potential loss, recovery, and adaptation based on the empirically established ties to community identity, such as sense of place. Variables of community identity are what translate the disruption, damage, restoration, reconstruction, and reconfiguration of a community's different critical services and capital resources to different states of wellbeing across a community that has been impacted by a hazard event. With reference to empirical research and the Canterbury case study, the presentation integrates these insights into a robust framework to facilitate meeting the challenge of raising the standard of community disaster resilience research and capacity building through development of wellbeing-centric approaches.