Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering, volume 21, issue 5, pages 2877-2919

Fragility curves of masonry buildings in aggregate accounting for local mechanisms and site effects

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-02-09
scimago Q1
SJR1.088
CiteScore8.9
Impact factor3.8
ISSN1570761X, 15731456
Building and Construction
Civil and Structural Engineering
Geophysics
Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Abstract

The seismic evaluation of masonry buildings in aggregate, largely diffused within the existing Italian and European building stock, represents a difficult and open task that has not been exhaustively investigated so far. The study proposes a procedure aimed at evaluating the potential impact of the combination of local mechanisms and site-amplification in terms of fragility curves on an existing unreinforced masonry (URM) aggregate which is made of five adjacent structural units mutually interacting with each other during seismic sequences. The case study is inspired by built heritage of the historic centre of Visso struck by the Central Italy 2016/2017 earthquakes. The in-plane (IP) response of URM buildings was simulated through nonlinear dynamic analyses performed on a 3D equivalent frame model of the structure, whereas out-of-plane (OOP) mechanisms were analysed by adopting the rigid-block assumption but assuming, as seismic input, the floor accelerations derived from the post-processing of data derived from the global 3D model. An innovative procedure considering the pounding effect to the global response of the building is also presented. Two soil conditions were assumed with (freefield) and without (bedrock) site amplification. The results showed that site effects strongly affected the seismic vulnerability of the aggregate, also altering the combination between IP and OOP mechanisms. In fact, for bedrock condition, especially for medium–high damage levels, local mechanisms were prevailing with respect to the IP response. Conversely, for freefield condition, IP mainly governed the overall behaviour for all the damage levels, consistently with the field evidence.

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