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Earthquake-Resistant Design Concepts - An Introduction to the NEHRP Recommended Seismic Provisions for New Buildings and Other Structures (FEMA P-749 / December 2010) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R561
Discovery Miles 5 610
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Earthquake-Resistant Design Concepts - An Introduction to the NEHRP Recommended Seismic Provisions for New Buildings and Other Structures (FEMA P-749 / December 2010) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R561
Discovery Miles 5 610
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Of the 500,000 or so detectable earthquakes that occur on Planet
Earth each year, people will "feel" about 100,000 of them and about
100 will cause damage. Although most earthquakes are moderate in
size and destructive potential, a severe earthquake occasionally
strikes a community that is not adequately prepared and thousands
of lives and billions of dollars in economic investment are lost.
For example, a great earthquake and the fires it initiated
destroyed much of San Francisco in 1906 and a significant portion
of Anchorage, Alaska, was destroyed by a large earthquake in 1964.
Within the past 200 years, major destructive earthquakes also
occurred in Charleston, South Carolina, and Memphis, Tennessee.
Within the past 50 years, smaller but damaging earthquakes occurred
several times in both Los Angeles and Seattle. Overall, more than
20 states have a moderate or high risk of experiencing damaging
earthquakes. Earthquakes are truly a national problem. One of the
key ways a community protects itself from potential earthquake
disasters is by adopting and enforcing a building code with
appropriate seismic design and construction standards. The seismic
requirements in U.S. model building codes and standards are updated
through the volunteer efforts of design professionals and
construction industry representatives under a process sponsored by
the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and administered by
the Building Seismic Safety Council (BSSC). At regular intervals,
the BSSC develops and FEMA publishes the NEHRP (National Earthquake
Hazards Reduction Program) Recommended Seismic Provisions for New
Buildings and Other Structures (referred to in this publication as
the NEHRP Recommended Seismic Provisions or simply the Provisions).
The Provisions serves as a resource used by the codes and standards
development organizations as they formulate sound seismic-resistant
design and construction requirements. The Provisions also provides
design professionals, building officials, and educators with
in-depth commentary on the intent and preferred application of the
seismic regulations. The 2009 edition of the Provisions (FEMA
P-750) and the building codes and consensus standards based on its
recommendations are, of necessity, highly technical documents
intended primarily for use by design professionals and others who
have specialized technical training. This introduction to the NEHRP
Recommended Seismic Provisions is intended to provide these
interested individuals with a readily understandable explanation of
the intent of the earthquake-resistant design and requirements of
the Provisions. Chapter 1 explains the history and purpose of
building regulation in the United States, including the process
used to develop and adopt the nation's building codes and the
seismic requirements in these codes. Chapter 2 is an overview of
the performance intent of the Provisions. Among the topics
addressed are the national seismic hazard maps developed by the
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS); the seismic design maps adopted by
the Provisions as a basis for seismic design; and seismic risk,
which is a function of both the probability that a community will
experience intense earthquake ground shaking and the probability
that building construction will suffer significant damage because
of this ground motion. Chapter 3 identifies the design and
construction features of buildings and other structures that are
important to good seismic performance. Chapter 4 describes the
various types of structures and nonstructural components addressed
by the Provisions. Chapter 5 is an overview of the design
procedures contained in the Provisions. Chapter 6 addresses how the
practice of earthquake-resistant design is likely to evolve in the
future. A glossary of key technical terms, lists of notations and
acronyms used in this report, and a selected bibliography
identifying references that may be of interest to some readers
complete this report.
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