Climate Change and Natural Hazard Risk Assessment Framework for Coastal Cable-Stayed Bridges

Cable-stayed bridges have been used widely in the last 60 years in bridge construction practice and are key components of transportation networks. Therefore, the potential damages and losses, either in terms of economic cost or fatalities due to natural or man-made threats could become considerably...

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Main Author: Olga Markogiannaki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Built Environment
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fbuil.2019.00116/full
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spelling doaj-0642272940ba4729a0b0fcf6ed6b1d072020-11-25T01:37:53ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Built Environment2297-33622019-10-01510.3389/fbuil.2019.00116454929Climate Change and Natural Hazard Risk Assessment Framework for Coastal Cable-Stayed BridgesOlga Markogiannaki0Olga Markogiannaki1Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Western Macedonia, Kozani, GreeceDepartment of Civil Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, GreeceCable-stayed bridges have been used widely in the last 60 years in bridge construction practice and are key components of transportation networks. Therefore, the potential damages and losses, either in terms of economic cost or fatalities due to natural or man-made threats could become considerably large. Several researchers have identified the significance of risk assessment, especially to natural hazards and have proposed risk assessment frameworks for bridges. Recently, it has been identified that climate change affects the occurrence of extreme events and should be also incorporated in risk assessment. In the present research work, a risk assessment framework for cable-stayed bridges is proposed. The goal is to prioritize single and total risk to provide a useful tool in the decision-making process on the design and maintenance actions for cable-stayed bridges. Herein, the case study is an indicative design alternative of a cable-stayed bridge in a coastal area in the New York Region. which is expected to face sea-level rise due to climate change. Multi-hazard risk evaluation on the investigated bridge shows that it has low risk to the seismic hazard, while it has increased risk to hurricanes, which changes from low to high depending on the investigated sea-level rise projections and hurricane intensity levels. Hence, hurricane governs the resulting total risk of the case study bridge.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fbuil.2019.00116/fullbridge vulnerabilityseismic riskhurricane riskcable-stayed bridgemulti-hazardsea-level rise
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olga Markogiannaki
Olga Markogiannaki
spellingShingle Olga Markogiannaki
Olga Markogiannaki
Climate Change and Natural Hazard Risk Assessment Framework for Coastal Cable-Stayed Bridges
Frontiers in Built Environment
bridge vulnerability
seismic risk
hurricane risk
cable-stayed bridge
multi-hazard
sea-level rise
author_facet Olga Markogiannaki
Olga Markogiannaki
author_sort Olga Markogiannaki
title Climate Change and Natural Hazard Risk Assessment Framework for Coastal Cable-Stayed Bridges
title_short Climate Change and Natural Hazard Risk Assessment Framework for Coastal Cable-Stayed Bridges
title_full Climate Change and Natural Hazard Risk Assessment Framework for Coastal Cable-Stayed Bridges
title_fullStr Climate Change and Natural Hazard Risk Assessment Framework for Coastal Cable-Stayed Bridges
title_full_unstemmed Climate Change and Natural Hazard Risk Assessment Framework for Coastal Cable-Stayed Bridges
title_sort climate change and natural hazard risk assessment framework for coastal cable-stayed bridges
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Built Environment
issn 2297-3362
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Cable-stayed bridges have been used widely in the last 60 years in bridge construction practice and are key components of transportation networks. Therefore, the potential damages and losses, either in terms of economic cost or fatalities due to natural or man-made threats could become considerably large. Several researchers have identified the significance of risk assessment, especially to natural hazards and have proposed risk assessment frameworks for bridges. Recently, it has been identified that climate change affects the occurrence of extreme events and should be also incorporated in risk assessment. In the present research work, a risk assessment framework for cable-stayed bridges is proposed. The goal is to prioritize single and total risk to provide a useful tool in the decision-making process on the design and maintenance actions for cable-stayed bridges. Herein, the case study is an indicative design alternative of a cable-stayed bridge in a coastal area in the New York Region. which is expected to face sea-level rise due to climate change. Multi-hazard risk evaluation on the investigated bridge shows that it has low risk to the seismic hazard, while it has increased risk to hurricanes, which changes from low to high depending on the investigated sea-level rise projections and hurricane intensity levels. Hence, hurricane governs the resulting total risk of the case study bridge.
topic bridge vulnerability
seismic risk
hurricane risk
cable-stayed bridge
multi-hazard
sea-level rise
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fbuil.2019.00116/full
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