and the UK, demonstrating the international reach of the journal.The first paper by Johnston et al. (2016) describes a full-scale site fire test performed on a cold-formed steel portal frame building with semi-rigid joints, complemented with finiteelement modelling. The total length of the building was 10 m, comprising five frames spaced at 2·5 m. Each frame had a span of 8 m, height to eaves of 2·2 m and pitch of 10°. The fire test was carried out by several international experts from four research institutions, namely Queen's University Belfast, Curtin University, University of Strathclyde and Ecosteel, benefitting from unique fire testing facilities at Curtin University, Malaysia. In the full-scale fire test, the building collapsed asymmetrically at a temperature of 714°C. The paper also presents the development of a non-linear elasto-plastic finiteelement shell model for the building in fire. After model validation against the results of the full-scale fire test, a comprehensive parametric study is conducted, highlighting the importance of in-plane restraint from the side rails in preventing an outwards sway failure for both a single portal and full building geometry model. The study also demonstrates the importance of modelling the semi-rigidity of various joints in design.In the second paper, Behnam and Ronagh (2016) investigate the post-earthquake fire resistance of a two-bay reinforcedconcrete portal frame. Following a post-earthquake firewall break down, the paper computationally assesses three fire exposure scenarios: only the left part of the frame exposed, only the right part of the frame exposed and the entire frame exposed. Two action scenarios are also considered; the frame is first pushed to displacement corresponding to the life safety level of performance based on FEMA356 code, followed by a natural fire curve, whereas the second assumes a fire-alone analysis to provide a point of reference. The finite-element simulation shows that no failure occurs in any of the fire-alone scenarios, or when exposing the smaller part of the building to the post-earthquake fire, but exposing the larger part and the entire frame to post-earthquake fire causes frame collapse at around 50 min and 25 min, respectively. The investigation shows the importance of firewalls to reduce vulnerability of reinforced-concrete buildings in case of postearthquake fire.The third paper by Cairns and Goodchild (2016) reports on an experimental investigation into the performance of lapped steel joints in structural concrete. The paper considers the effect of three different parameters, namely concrete cover, proportion of bars lapped at a section and relative size of bars within a lapped pair. However, the main focus of the paper is to evaluate the reduction in lap strength where minimum concrete cover, as specified by Eurocode 2, is reduced below one bar diameter. The authors conclude that lap strength is decreased by approximately 12% when the bottom cover is reduced from 1·2 to 0·6 times bar diameter. It is also found that lap ...