Fallen files and equipment in an office on the fifth floor of the Registry building.
Fallen files and equipment in an office on the fifth floor of the Registry building.
Fallen files and equipment in an office on the fifth floor of the Registry building.
Fallen files and equipment in an office on the fifth floor of the Registry building.
Fallen files and equipment in an office on the fifth floor of the Registry building.
Two monitors fallen flat and papers on the floor in an office in the Registry Building.
Members of the recovery team climbing the stairs on the first floor of the Registry Building.
A worker sawing insulation to fit into the floor of a classroom in the Oval Villlage.
Members of the recovery team climbing the stairs on the first floor of the Registry Building.
Workers laying tiles on the floor of the Undercroft, a new eating area under the library.
Workers laying insulation into the floor of one of the temporary classrooms in the Ilam Oval.
A staff member cleaning up fallen jars and burst bags from the floor of Piko Wholefoods.
Draw contents fallen on the floor along with the draw in an office in the Registry Building.
Damage to an apartment complex on Durham Street. The building has collapsed on the ground floor level.
Damage to an apartment complex on Durham Street. The building has collapsed on the ground floor level.
Underfloor deposits are as exasperating as they are exciting. Exasperating because the context is not particularly secure: objects usually accumulate under a house over time (thrown or swept from the outside, lost or dropped between the floorboards, dragged in by … Continue reading →
Earthquake damage in a Commerce office on campus, papers fallen on the floor, and a filing cabinet toppled.
It's been a year since Pip Ranby was rescued from the top floor of the five storey Canterbury Television building.
Sticky Fingers Restaurant & Bar, on the ground floor of the Clarendon Tower, seen from across from the Avon river.
Insulation waiting to be installed into the floor of one of the temporary classrooms in the Ilam Oval.
A worker inserts glue between the insulation panels in the floor of one of the temporary buildings on the Ilam Oval.
Piles in the ground, waiting for the floors of temporary classrooms to be built on top, on the Ilam Oval.
The multi-storey Pacific Brands building on Victoria Street has been cordoned off. The Cranfield shop occupied the first floor.
Rob Clark was on the sixth floor of his office building when the quake struck, and got stuck in gridlock leaving the CBD.
A staff member takinga photograph of grains and beans fallen from bags onto the floor of Piko Wholefoods.
The Copy Centre operating out of a space at the ground floor of the UCSA building, adjacent to the food court.
Floor systems with precast concrete hollow-core units have been largely used in concrete buildings built in New Zealand during the 1980’s. Recent earthquakes, such as the Canterbury sequence in 2010-2011 and the Kaikoura earthquake in 2016, highlighted that this floor system can be highly vulnerable and potentially lead to the floor collapse. A series of research activities are in progress to better understand the seismic performance of floor diaphragms, and this research focuses on examining the performance of hollow core units running parallel to the walls of wall-resisting concrete structures. This study first focused on the development of fragility functions, which can be quickly used to assess likelihood of the hollow-core being able to survive given the buildings design drift, and secondly to determine the expected performance of hollow-core units that run parallel to walls, focusing on the alpha unit running by the wall. Fragility functions are created for a range of different parameters for both vertical dislocation and crack width that can be used as the basis of a quick analysis or loss estimation for the likely impact of hollow-core floors on building vulnerability and risk. This was done using past experimental tests, and the recorded damage. Using these results and the method developed by Baker fragility curves were able to be created for varying crack widths and vertical dislocations. Current guidelines for analysis of hollow-core unit incompatible displacements are based on experimental vertical displacement results from concrete moment resisting frame systems to determine the capacity of hollow-core elements. To investigate the demands on hollow-core units in a wall-based structure, a fibre-element model in the software Seismostruct is created and subject to quasi-static cyclic loading, using elements which are verified from previous experimental tests. It is shown that for hollow-core units running by walls that the 10 mm displacement capacity used for hollow-core units running by a beam is insufficient for members running by walls and that shear analysis should be used. The fibre-element model is used to simulate the seismic demand induced on the floor system and has shown that the shear demand is a function of drift, wall length, hollow-core span, linking slab length and, to a minor extent, wall elongation.
A photograph of a crack in the floor of the Diabetes Centre. The crack has been filled in.
Emergency and security staff members prepare to enter the 6th floor of the Registry building to retrieve work from the offices there.
Emergency and security staff members prepare to enter the 6th floor of the Registry building to retrieve work from the offices there.