
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a detail of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the partially-demolished Nurse Maude Building on Madras Street.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to the ceiling of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of a detail of Deans farm buildings on Kahu Road.
A photograph of the partially-demolished Austral Building on Colombo Street.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the partially-demolished Nurse Maude Building on Madras Street.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the partially-demolished Austral Building on Colombo Street.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
A photograph of the earthquake damage to a window of the Fisher's Building.
Building Record Form for Cashfields, 154 Cashel Street, Christchurch.
A photograph of a detail of Deans farm buildings on Kahu Road.
A photograph of the partially-demolished Nurse Maude Building on Madras Street.
A photograph of a detail of the Stranges Building.
A photograph of details above two windows of Montgomery's Building on Colombo Street.
A red sticker outside a building. This notice means the building is unsafe to enter.
Following the devastating 1931 Hawke's Bay earthquake, buildings in Napier and surrounding areas in the Hawke's Bay region were rebuilt in a comparatively homogenous structural and architectural style comprising the region's famous Art Deco stock. These interwar buildings are most often composed of reinforced concrete two-way space frames, and although they have comparatively ductile detailing for their date of construction, are often expected to be brittle, earthquake-prone buildings in preliminary seismic assessments. Furthermore, the likelihood of global collapse of an RC building during a design-level earthquake became an issue warranting particular attention following the collapse of multiple RC buildings in the February 22, 2011 Christchurch earthquake. Those who value the architectural heritage and future use of these iconic Art Deco buildings - including building owners, tenants, and city officials, among others - must consider how they can be best preserved and utilized functionally given the especially pressing implications of relevant safety, regulatory, and economic factors. This study was intended to provide information on the seismic hazard, geometric weaknesses, collapse hazards, material properties, structural detailing, empirically based vulnerability, and recommended analysis approaches particular to Art Deco buildings in Hawke's Bay as a resource for professional structural engineers tasked with seismic assessments and retrofit designs for these buildings. The observed satisfactory performance of similar low-rise, ostensibly brittle RC buildings in other earthquakes and the examination of the structural redundancy and expected column drift capacities in these buildings, led to the conclusion that the seismic capacity of these buildings is generally underrated in simple, force-based assessments.
Low Damage Seismic Design (LDSD) guidance material being developed by Engineering NZ is considering a design drift limit for multi-storey buildings of 0.5% at a new damage control limit state (DCLS). The impact of this new design requirement on the expected annual loss due to repair costs is investigated for a four-storey office building with reinforced concrete walls located in Christchurch. The LDSD guidance material aims to reduce the expected annual loss of complying buildings to below 0.1% of building replacement cost. The research tested this expectation. Losses were estimated in accordance with FEMA P58, using building responses from non-linear time history analyses (performed with OpenSees using lumped plasticity models). The equivalent static method, in line with NZS 1170.5 and NZS 3101, was used to design the building to LDSD specifications, representing a future state-of-practice design. The building designed to low-damage specification returned an expected annual loss of 0.10%, and the building designed conventionally returned an expected annual loss of 0.13%. Limitations with the NZS 3101 method for determining wall stiffness were identified, and a different method acknowledging the relationship between strength and stiffness was used to redesign the building. Along with improving this design assumption, the study finds that LDSD design criteria could be an effective way of limiting damage and losses.
Building Record Form for Rhodes Memorial Home, 5 Overdale Drive, Christchurch
Building Record Form for St George's Hospital, 251 Papanui Road, Christchurch
Building Record Form for Linwood House, 30 Linwood Avenue, Linwood, Christchurch
Building Record Form for former Daresbury Stables, 7 Daresbury Lane, Christchurch