For some of us, that title may have conjured up childhood memories of making ‘sand-saucer’ gardens for the local flower show or ‘pet and garden’ day at school. But I’ve actually something different in mind. We have found quite a … Continue reading →
Have you always wanted to travel the world? See the famous cathedrals of Europe? Smell the streets of China? Taste the spices of India? But travelling is expensive and everything’s just so damn far away, right? Well have we got … Continue reading →
A map of the tectonic plate boundary of the alpine fault in New Zealand.
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Jo Kerr, where she was sitting when a plate-glass window shattered during an aftershock".
Photograph captioned by Fairfax, "Jo Kerr, where she was sitting when a plate-glass window shattered during an aftershock".
A historic plate smashed in the February Christchurch earthquake. Ashley Gorge Scenic Reserve was established by my Great-Grandmother (maternal) many years ago.
On the way to Darfield to locate the faultline where the tectonic plates slipped, causing the magnitude 7.1 earthquake on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Presenting a selection of children’s ceramic plates and cups excavated in Christchurch for your perusal, with commentary. Jessie Garland References Riley, Noel., 1991. Gifts for Good Children: The History of Children’s China, Part 1, 1790-1890. Richard Dennis, Somerset.
…this yard being kept in a disreputable state, there are no cinder pits in proper places to throw the refuse of cooking and things in general, as at home, so old bones, vegetable remains, scrapings of plates, cinders, tea leaves, … Continue reading →
Following on from last week’s blog, today’s post takes a look at how we date ceramic artefacts, specifically the plates, cups, bowls and saucers we find so often in Christchurch. Many of the issues I mentioned last week with regard … Continue reading →
On the previously unknown faultline on Highfield Road in mid-Canterbury! This was where two tectonic plates slipped, causing the magnitude 7.1 earthquake on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
Slipping of the tectonic plates caused tension cracks on this previously unknown faultline that runs through this paddock; magnitude 7.1 earthquake in mid-Canterbury on Saturday 4 September 2010.
A buckling-restrained braced frame (BRBF) is a structural bracing system that provides lateral strength and stiffness to buildings and bridges. They were first developed in Japan in the 1970s (Watanabe et al. 1973, Kimura et al. 1976) and gained rapid acceptance in the United States after the Northridge earthquake in 1994 (Bruneau et al. 2011). However, it was not until the Canterbury earthquakes of 2010/2011, that the New Zealand construction market saw a significant uptake in the use of buckling-restrained braces (BRBs) in commercial buildings (MacRae et al. 2015). In New Zealand there is not yet any documented guidance or specific instructions in regulatory standards for the design of BRBFs. This makes it difficult for engineers to anticipate all the possible stability and strength issues within a BRBF system and actively mitigate them in each design. To help ensure BRBF designs perform as intended, a peer review with physical testing are needed to gain building compliance in New Zealand. Physical testing should check the manufacturing and design of each BRB (prequalification testing), and the global strength and stability of each BRB its frame (subassemblage testing). However, the financial pressures inherent in commercial projects has led to prequalification testing (BRB only testing) being favoured without adequate design specific subassemblage testing. This means peer reviewers have to rely on BRB suppliers for assurances. This low regulation environment allows for a variety of BRBF designs to be constructed without being tested or well understood. The concern is that there may be designs that pose risk and that issues are being overlooked in design and review. To improve the safety and design of BRBFs in New Zealand, this dissertation studies the behaviour of BRBs and how they interact with other frame components. Presented is the experimental test process and results of five commercially available BRB designs (Chapter 2). It discusses the manufacturing process, testing conditions and limitations of observable information. It also emphasises that even though subassemblage testing is impractical, uniaxial testing of the BRB only is not enough, as this does not check global strength or stability. As an alternative to physical testing, this research uses computer simulation to model BRB behaviour. To overcome the traditional challenges of detailed BRB modelling, a strategy to simulate the performance of generic BRB designs was developed (Chapter 3). The development of nonlinear material and contact models are important aspects of this strategy. The Chaboche method is employed using a minimum of six backstress curves to characterize the combined isotropic and kinematic hardening exhibited by the steel core. A simplified approach, adequate for modelling the contact interaction between the restrainer and the core was found. Models also capture important frictional dissipation as well as lateral motion and bending associated with high order constrained buckling of the core. The experimental data from Chapter 2 was used to validate this strategy. As BRBs resist high compressive loading, global stability of the BRB and gusseted connection zone need to be considered. A separate study was conducted that investigated the yielding and buckling strength of gusset plates (Chapter 4). The stress distribution through a gusset plate is complex and difficult to predict because the cross-sectional area of gusset plate is not uniform, and each gusset plate design is unique in shape and size. This has motivated design methods that approximate yielding of gusset plates. Finite element modelling was used to study the development of yielding, buckling and plastic collapse behaviour of a brace end bolted to a series of corner gusset plates. In total 184 variations of gusset plate geometries were modelled in Abaqus®. The FEA modelling applied monotonic uniaxial load with an imperfection. Upon comparing results to current gusset plate design methods, it was found that the Whitmore width method for calculating the yield load of a gusset is generally un-conservative. To improve accuracy and safety in the design of gusset plates, modifications to current design methods for calculating the yield area and compressive strength for gusset plates is proposed. Bolted connections are a popular and common connection type used in BRBF design. Global out-of-plane stability tends to govern the design for this connection type with numerous studies highlighting the risk of instability initiated by inelasticity in the gussets, neck of the BRB end and/or restrainer ends. Subassemblage testing is the traditional method for evaluating global stability. However, physical testing of every BRBF variation is cost prohibitive. As such, Japan has developed an analytical approach to evaluate out-of-plane stability of BRBFs and incorporated this in their design codes. This analytical approach evaluates the different BRB components under possible collapse mechanisms by focusing on moment transfer between the restrainer and end of the BRB. The approach have led to strict criteria for BRBF design in Japan. Structural building design codes in New Zealand, Europe and the United States do not yet provide analytical methods to assess BRB and connection stability, with prototype/subassemblage testing still required as the primary means of accreditation. Therefore it is of interest to investigate the capability of this method to evaluate stability of BRBs designs and gusset plate designs used in New Zealand (including unstiffened gusset connection zones). Chapter 5 demonstrates the capability of FEA to study to the performance of a subassemblage test under cyclic loading – resembling that of a diagonal ground storey BRBF with bolted connections. A series of detailed models were developed using the strategy presented in Chapter 3. The geometric features of BRB 6.5a (Chapter 2) were used as a basis for the BRBs modelled. To capture the different failure mechanisms identified in Takeuchi et al. (2017), models varied the length that the cruciform (non-yielding) section inserts into the restrainer. Results indicate that gusset plates designed according to New Zealand’s Steel Structures Standard (NZS 3404) limit BRBF performance. Increasing the thickness of the gusset plates according to modifications discussed in Chapter 4, improved the overall performance for all variants (except when Lin/ Bcruc = 0.5). The effect of bi-directional loading was not found to notably affect out-of-plane stability. Results were compared against predictions made by the analytical method used in Japan (Takeuchi method). This method was found to be generally conservative is predicting out-of-plane stability of each BRBF model. Recommendations to improve the accuracy of Takeuchi’s method are also provided. The outcomes from this thesis should be helpful for BRB manufacturers, researchers, and in the development of further design guidance of BRBFs.
Ceramic artefacts are some of the most common finds recovered from 19th century Christchurch archaeological sites. Teacups, saucers, plates, dishes, bottles, jars, jugs, chamber pots, wash basins…heaps of objects related to food and drink preparation, consumption and storage as well … Conti...
The Mw 7.8 Kaikōura earthquake ruptured ~200 km at the ground surface across the New Zealand plate boundary zone in the northern South Island. This study was conducted in an area of ~600 km2 in the epicentral region where the faults comprise two main non-coplanar sets that strike E-NE and NNE-NW with mainly steep dips (60о-80°). Analysis of the surface rupture using field and LiDAR data provides new information on the dimensions, geometries and kinematics of these faults which was not previously available from pre-earthquake active faults or bedrock structure. The more northerly striking fault set are sub-parallel to basement bedding and accommodated predominantly left-lateral reverse slip with net slips of ~1 and ~5 m for the Stone Jug and Leader faults, respectively. The E-NE striking Conway-Charwell and The Humps faults accrued right-lateral to oblique reverse with net slips of ~2 and ~3 m, respectively. The faults form a hard-linked system dominated by kinematics consistent with the ~260° trend of the relative plate motion vector and the transpressional structures recorded across the plate boundary in the NE South Island. Interaction and intersection of the main fault sets facilitated propagation of the earthquake and transfer of slip northwards across the plate boundary zone.
According to TS 1170.5, designing a building to satisfy code-prescribed criteria (e.g., drift limit, member safety, P-Δ stability) at the ultimate limit state and relying on the inherent margins within the design code would lead to an acceptable mean annual frequency of collapse (λ꜀) in the range of 10−⁴ to 10−⁵. Modern performance objectives, such as λ꜀ and expected annual loss (EAL), are not explicitly considered. Although buckling-restrained braced frame (BRBF) buildings were widely adopted as lateral load-resisting systems for office and car park buildings in the Christchurch rebuild following the Canterbury earthquakes in New Zealand, there are currently no official guidelines for their design. The primary focus of this study is to develop a risk-targeted design framework for BRBF buildings that can achieve the performance objectives desired by stakeholders. To this extent, key factors influencing λ꜀ and EAL of BRBF buildings are identified. These factors include gusset plate design, number of storeys, design drift limit, BRBF beam-column connection, brace configuration, brace angle, brace material grade, and analysis method (equivalent lateral force vs. modal response spectrum). A novel 3D BRBF modelling approach capable of simulating out-of-plane buckling failure of buckling-restrained brace (BRB) gusset plates is developed. Prior experimental studies on sub-assemblies conducted elsewhere have demonstrated that gusset plates and end zones may buckle out of plane prematurely, before BRBs reach their maximum axial compression load carrying capacity. Current 2D BRBF macro models, typically used in research, cannot simulate this failure mode. A conventional 2D BRBF model underestimates the λ꜀ of a case-study 4-storey super-X configured steel BRBF building (designed according to NZS-3404) by a factor of two compared to the estimate from the proposed 3D model. These findings suggest that the current NZS-3404 gusset plate design method may undersize gusset plates and that using a 2D BRBF model in this case can significantly underestimate λ꜀. Three improved alternative gusset plate design methods that are easy to implement in practice are identified from the literature. Gusset plates in two case-study 4-storey steel BRBF buildings with super-X and diagonal configurations are designed using both the NZS-3404 method and alternative methods. All three alternative design methods are found to be conservative, resulting in an almost three-fold lower λ꜀ for both case-study BRBF buildings compared to those designed using the NZS-3404 method. Analysis results indicate that (i) bidirectional interaction has no significant effect on gusset plate buckling and (ii) mid-span gusset plates are more susceptible to buckling than corner gusset plates. A framework for seismic loss assessment using incremental dynamic analysis (IDA), called loss-oriented hazard-consistent incremental dynamic analysis (LOHC-IDA), is developed. IDA can be conducted with a generic record set, eliminating the arduous site-specific record selection required to conduct multiple stripe analysis (MSA). Traditional IDA, however, is limited in producing hazard-consistent estimates of engineering demand parameters (EDPs), which LOHC-IDA overcomes. LOHC-IDA improves upon existing methods by: (i) incorporating correlations among engineering demand parameters across intensity levels and (ii) using peak ground acceleration (PGA) to predict peak floor acceleration (PFA). For two case-study steel BRBF buildings, LOHC-IDA estimates the EAL and loss distributions conditioned on the intensity level that closely match the MSA results, with an average absolute error of 5%. The influence of factors beyond gusset plate design on the λ꜀ and EAL of 26 case-study steel BRBF buildings (designed in accordance with TS 1170.5) is examined. Hazard-consistent λ꜀ and EAL for these buildings are estimated using the FEMA P-58 loss and risk assessment framework. Among the 26 case-study buildings, 23 satisfy the maximum code-specified λ꜀ limit of 10−⁴. The EAL, normalised by the total building replacement cost, is highest for 2-storey BRBFs (0.22% on average), followed by 4-storey BRBFs (0.16% on average) and 8-storey BRBFs (0.11% on average). Reducing the design drift limit has the most significant effect on lowering λ꜀ (all BRBF designs were drift governed), followed by transitioning from pinned to moment-resisting beam-column connections, reducing the brace angle, and increasing brace strength. BRBF buildings designed using the equivalent lateral force method, on average, have a lower λ꜀ compared to those designed using the modal response spectrum method. Diagonally configured BRBFs exhibit the lowest λ꜀, followed by super- X and chevron configured BRBFs. Most design variables, apart from drift limit and beam-column connection, have limited influence on EAL. A simple method for EDP-targeted design of steel BRBF buildings is proposed. For this purpose, linear regression and CatBoost machine learning models are developed to predict steel BRBF building EDPs using peak storey drift ratio (PSDR) and PFA estimates from the 26 case-study buildings at intensity levels ranging from 80% to 0.5% probability of exceedance in 50 years. The R²ₐₔⱼ of these models is around 0.98, while the average prediction error is less than 10%. Fundamental period (T₁), total building height (Hₜ), and pseudospectral acceleration at T₁, denoted as Sₐ(T₁), are selected as the features to predict PSDR, while T₁, Hₜ, and PGA are the features selected to predict PFA. The EDP-targeted design has three steps: (i) for a given Hₜ value, the PSDR prediction model is used to identify a suitable T₁ that can achieve a desired PSDR target at the design intensity, (ii) a force-based design is then conducted iteratively to achieve the target T₁ by using an appropriate ductility factor and design drift limit, and (iii) based on the T₁ in the final design iteration, the PFA demand estimated by the PFA prediction models is used as a conservative input for the design of acceleration-sensitive non-structural elements. An equation to predict λ꜀ at the design stage is proposed for collapse risk-targeted seismic design of buildings. This equation comprises three principal components: reserve building strength, a proxy for effective structural stiffness, and reserve building deformation capacity. This equation is calibrated for the collapse risk-targeted design of BRBF buildings in New Zealand using results from 26 case-study BRBF buildings. The validity of this equation is demonstrated with three design verification examples designed to specific λ꜀ targets. Considering λ꜀ from hazard-consistent incremental dynamic analysis as the benchmark, the mean absolute percentage error in the design-stage prediction of λ꜀ of the verification buildings is approximately 10%.
Shows a man representing Christchurch holding aloft the words 'belief', 'optimism' and 'faith' on a plate. Refers to the blueprint for central Christchurch developed by the Christchurch Central Development Unit, which was unveiled on 30 July 2012. Quantity: 1 digital cartoon(s).