Assessment of Damage Risks to Residential Buildings and Cost–Benefit of Mitigation Strategies Considering Hurricane and Earthquake Hazards
Publication: Journal of Performance of Constructed Facilities
Volume 26, Issue 1
Abstract
Damage to residential buildings in the United States caused by hurricanes, earthquakes, and other natural hazards is significant. Economic losses average approximately $5.4 billion annually from hurricanes and approximately $4.4 billion a year from earthquakes. In certain areas, multiple hazards pose a significant threat to buildings, however, it is a challenge to optimize allocation of hazard mitigation resources. To cost-effectively mitigate risk from multiple natural hazards, a better understanding of building performance during extreme natural events will provide a basis for achieving cost-effective mitigation of risk from competing natural hazards. This paper demonstrates a risk-cost-benefit framework for assessing damage risks and cost-effectiveness of mitigation strategies for residential buildings using life-cycle and scenario-case analysis. The framework includes probabilistic modeling of the occurrence and intensity of natural hazards, structural system fragility modeling to represent the conditional probability of damage, and a model of total expected cost during different service intervals. The assessment can support improvements in design and construction practices, insurance underwriting, and planning community response to disasters. Many factors that are hard to quantify yet important in risk assessment are discussed for their roles and impacts on hazard mitigation decision making.
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Acknowledgments
This research was supported, in part, by Department of Defense University Research Instrumentation Program (DURIP) (UNSPECIFIEDFA-9550-07-1-0500). Their support is gratefully acknowledged. However, the writer takes sole responsibility for the views expressed in this paper. The author would like to thank Professor Howard Qi in the School of Business and Economics at Michigan Technological University for his invaluable comments and suggestions when preparing this paper.
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© 2012 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Received: Sep 23, 2010
Accepted: Dec 27, 2010
Published online: Dec 30, 2010
Published in print: Feb 1, 2012
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