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contributor authorMatthew D. Joyner
contributor authorMargaret Kurth
date accessioned2025-04-20T10:33:07Z
date available2025-04-20T10:33:07Z
date copyright8/28/2024 12:00:00 AM
date issued2024
identifier otherNHREFO.NHENG-2039.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4304940
description abstractResilience-based design is emerging as an important frontier in the building design community, seeking to better support communities to absorb and recover from adverse events. Currently the minimum requirements of modern building codes do not adequately address resilience, leaving such concerns to be addressed by developers, engineers, and other stakeholders. The need for resilience-focused design, retrofit, and reconstruction planning is particularly pressing for the United States Department of Defense (DoD), which owns a large portfolio of building across the US and abroad that are exposed to a wide range of hazards. In recent years, DoD installations have suffered severe and prolonged disruption to functionality due to building damage from hurricanes and earthquakes, underscoring the need for more resilient design practices. In distributing limited funds to enhance the resilience of a portfolio of installation assets, some buildings must be prioritized over others to maximize the impact of each dollar on resilience of installation functions and missions. In this research, a methodology was developed to distribute limited funds among a group of buildings for resilience enhancements. An incremental investment approach was devised which distributes resources to each building based on its relative need for performance improvement, cost-effectiveness, and the importance of the building to the installation’s missions. Importance to missions is characterized by the Mission Dependency Index (MDI), a DoD metric that conveys the extent to which a building’s function can be interrupted without adversely impacting missions and how easily the functions served by the building can be relocated in the event of a disruption. The methodology is demonstrated through the design of four RC buildings of varying importance for a hypothetical site on the China Lake Naval Air Weapons Station in Ridgecrest, California. The results demonstrate that the methodology was able to balance the need, cost-effectiveness, and importance of the four buildings when distributing limited funds.
publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
titleMission-Guided Resilience Investment Allocation for Buildings on DoD Installations
typeJournal Article
journal volume25
journal issue4
journal titleNatural Hazards Review
identifier doi10.1061/NHREFO.NHENG-2039
journal fristpage04024041-1
journal lastpage04024041-12
page12
treeNatural Hazards Review:;2024:;Volume ( 025 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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