Evaluating the DBH Verification Method to Complex Buildings Designed According to New Zealand Compliance Documents C/AS1

Performance-based fire engineering design is becoming a more common practice for fire safety design of large complex buildings and modifying existing buildings. However, different engineering assumptions and ambiguous acceptance criteria not only lead to inconsistent level of safety, but also cause...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Han, Yuzhuo
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Department of Civil and Natural Resources Engineering 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/8992
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-89922015-03-30T15:29:46ZEvaluating the DBH Verification Method to Complex Buildings Designed According to New Zealand Compliance Documents C/AS1Han, YuzhuoVerification MethodBuilding CodeCompliance DocumentsPerformance BasedAcceptable SolutionC/AS1C/VM2Performance-based fire engineering design is becoming a more common practice for fire safety design of large complex buildings and modifying existing buildings. However, different engineering assumptions and ambiguous acceptance criteria not only lead to inconsistent level of safety, but also cause inefficient Building Consent process and can result in expensive appeals. In August 2006 the New Zealand Department of Building and Housing (DBH) has been developing a Verification Method (C/VM2) for demonstrating compliance with the Fire Safety requirements of the New Zealand Building Code (C Clauses). This research evaluated the proposed C/VM2 on four complex buildings, including Multi-level Night Club, Hospital, Shopping Mall and Retail Warehouse. It has showed that the C/VM2 successfully implements a systematic and less ambiguous guidance for the future performance-based fire safety designs. However, continued analysis and development is necessary that a solely deterministic method may not be the best solution. A risk-based concept is suggested to be incorporated into the new generation of the C/VM2.University of Canterbury. Department of Civil and Natural Resources Engineering2014-03-27T02:25:54Z2014-03-27T02:25:54Z2011Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/8992enNZCUCopyright Yuzhuo Hanhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Verification Method
Building Code
Compliance Documents
Performance Based
Acceptable Solution
C/AS1
C/VM2
spellingShingle Verification Method
Building Code
Compliance Documents
Performance Based
Acceptable Solution
C/AS1
C/VM2
Han, Yuzhuo
Evaluating the DBH Verification Method to Complex Buildings Designed According to New Zealand Compliance Documents C/AS1
description Performance-based fire engineering design is becoming a more common practice for fire safety design of large complex buildings and modifying existing buildings. However, different engineering assumptions and ambiguous acceptance criteria not only lead to inconsistent level of safety, but also cause inefficient Building Consent process and can result in expensive appeals. In August 2006 the New Zealand Department of Building and Housing (DBH) has been developing a Verification Method (C/VM2) for demonstrating compliance with the Fire Safety requirements of the New Zealand Building Code (C Clauses). This research evaluated the proposed C/VM2 on four complex buildings, including Multi-level Night Club, Hospital, Shopping Mall and Retail Warehouse. It has showed that the C/VM2 successfully implements a systematic and less ambiguous guidance for the future performance-based fire safety designs. However, continued analysis and development is necessary that a solely deterministic method may not be the best solution. A risk-based concept is suggested to be incorporated into the new generation of the C/VM2.
author Han, Yuzhuo
author_facet Han, Yuzhuo
author_sort Han, Yuzhuo
title Evaluating the DBH Verification Method to Complex Buildings Designed According to New Zealand Compliance Documents C/AS1
title_short Evaluating the DBH Verification Method to Complex Buildings Designed According to New Zealand Compliance Documents C/AS1
title_full Evaluating the DBH Verification Method to Complex Buildings Designed According to New Zealand Compliance Documents C/AS1
title_fullStr Evaluating the DBH Verification Method to Complex Buildings Designed According to New Zealand Compliance Documents C/AS1
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the DBH Verification Method to Complex Buildings Designed According to New Zealand Compliance Documents C/AS1
title_sort evaluating the dbh verification method to complex buildings designed according to new zealand compliance documents c/as1
publisher University of Canterbury. Department of Civil and Natural Resources Engineering
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/8992
work_keys_str_mv AT hanyuzhuo evaluatingthedbhverificationmethodtocomplexbuildingsdesignedaccordingtonewzealandcompliancedocumentscas1
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