2022
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-2378321/v1
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Estimating urban seismic damages and debris at the building-level: Application to the city of Beirut, Lebanon

Abstract: The estimation of seismic damages and debris at the urban scale - at a precise building-by-building level- is challenging for several reasons. First, commonly used methodologies for seismic damage estimation rarely take into account the local site effects, precisely at the building-level. Second, the available methods for debris estimation fail to estimate at the same time the quantity of debris generated per building according to its damage level and the distribution of the debris (extent and height) around b… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…Similarly, the debris assessment is performed in a separate module, and the resulting results are integrated into PEERS as debris zones, defined by their heights and extent. Additional information on the building damage and debris assessment can be found in Iskandar et al 49 To estimate the casualties (injury and death), we consider that during ground shaking, an agent that is in a building or in a debris zone might become injured with a probability (casualty rate) that depends on the building's typology and its damage state. The casualty rates are based on the HAZUS loss estimation manual of the FEMA 50 and are assigned to the buildings and debris zones accordingly.…”
Section: Earthquake Damage Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Similarly, the debris assessment is performed in a separate module, and the resulting results are integrated into PEERS as debris zones, defined by their heights and extent. Additional information on the building damage and debris assessment can be found in Iskandar et al 49 To estimate the casualties (injury and death), we consider that during ground shaking, an agent that is in a building or in a debris zone might become injured with a probability (casualty rate) that depends on the building's typology and its damage state. The casualty rates are based on the HAZUS loss estimation manual of the FEMA 50 and are assigned to the buildings and debris zones accordingly.…”
Section: Earthquake Damage Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, the debris assessment is performed in a separate module, and the resulting results are integrated into PEERS as debris zones, defined by their heights and extent. Additional information on the building damage and debris assessment can be found in Iskandar et al 49…”
Section: Peers: Multi-model Of Seismic Crisis In Urban Areamentioning
confidence: 99%