“…This strategy shows the advantage of providing the multiplier with very low CPU times, in comparison with the incremental elastoplastic analysis, presented here, in which however much other information regarding plastic collapse may be obtained.Even though the formulation via SGBEM, applied to plasticity problems, provides a high level of knowledge, computational difficulties have reduced the application of the method in practical engineering problems. Indeed, in literature there are very few applications, often utilizing simplified procedures to obtain the elastoplastic response.In the present paper, a multidomain SGBEM strategy, based on an initial strain approach for two-dimensional body analysis in the hypothesis of elastic-perfectly plastic behaviour, von Mises materials, associated flow and plane strain condition, is shown.Let us start from the discretization of the domain through a substructuring used following an SGBEM multidomain strategy [11,12] for both the substructures (called macro-elements), generally of large dimensions, having merely elastic behaviour and the substructures (called bem-elements or bem-e), generally having very small dimensions, used in the elastoplastic phenomenon. Then, let us utilize the displacement method, introduced by Panzeca et al [11], by imposing the regularity (or coupling) conditions at the interface boundaries among substructures, in which the unknowns are the interface nodal displacements.…”