2014
DOI: 10.5194/nhess-14-689-2014
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A reliability assessment of physical vulnerability of reinforced concrete walls loaded by snow avalanches

Abstract: Abstract. Snow avalanches are a threat to many kinds of elements (human beings, communication axes, structures, etc.) in mountain regions. For risk evaluation, the vulnerability assessment of civil engineering structures such as buildings and dwellings exposed to avalanches still needs to be improved. This paper presents an approach to determine the fragility curves associated with reinforced concrete (RC) structures loaded by typical avalanche pressures and provides quantitative results for different geometri… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…However, to put our results in a broader perspective, the herein obtained fragility curves were plotted against the existing curves. First, the numerical fragility curves proposed by Favier et al (2014) (Fig. 13a) were considered.…”
Section: Comparison To Existing Curvesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, to put our results in a broader perspective, the herein obtained fragility curves were plotted against the existing curves. First, the numerical fragility curves proposed by Favier et al (2014) (Fig. 13a) were considered.…”
Section: Comparison To Existing Curvesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…13c) Figure 13. Comparison of the article fragility curve to (a) the numerical fragility curves from Favier et al (2014), (b) the expert judgmental fragility curves of Wilhelm (1998), and (c) the vulnerability curves of Barbolini et al (2004) and Keylock et al (1999). The exact meaning of each curve is provided in text.…”
Section: Comparison To Existing Curvesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Specifically, temporal and spatial aspects of snow avalanche activity and risk can now be jointly explored much more efficiently taking into account their main drivers, which represents a crucial improvement both for scientific purposes and for local on-site risk management by technicians and stakeholders. Already available examples having largely beneficiated of these new facilities include detailed investigation of climatic drivers of avalanche activity in the French Alps (Lavigne et al, 2015), long-term forecasting of extreme avalanche events , crosscomparison with tree ring data and connection to afforestation processes (Schläppy et al, 2014), short-term forecasting of major winter storms (Dkengne et al, 2015), socioeconomic assessment of the vulnerability of various types of buildings (Favier et al, 2014) and subsequent risk assessment for inhabited areas (Eckert et al, 2008).…”
Section: Study Case: the Clpamentioning
confidence: 99%