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    Examining the Impact of Adverse Weather on Urban Rail Transit Facilities on the Basis of Fault Tree Analysis and Fuzzy Synthetic Evaluation

    Source: Journal of Transportation Engineering, Part A: Systems:;2014:;Volume ( 140 ):;issue: 003
    Author:
    Jiaqi Ma
    ,
    Yan Bai
    ,
    Jianfeng Shen
    ,
    Fang Zhou
    DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)TE.1943-5436.0000630
    Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
    Abstract: The increasingly frequent extreme weather disasters caused by global climate change have attracted more attention to adverse weather’s effect on infrastructure systems. This paper aims to establish an integrated approach to assessing adverse weather’s effect on urban rail transit facilities and to provide decision makers with a powerful tool to analyze potential risks and allocate limited sources for risk management. First, fault tree analysis is used to understand where the risks are, how the risks will occur, and what factors have the most significant effects by analyzing all possible basic events. All wind-, rain-, and snow-related adverse weather, along with human-related factors (construction leftover problems and design drawbacks), are found to potentially cause great risks. Adverse impact scenarios are summarized based on the fault tree analysis. Next, an analytic hierarchical process (AHP)–based fuzzy synthetic evaluation model is established to assess the risk level based on an evaluation index system. AHP is used to calculate the weights between the indices for each adverse weather factor. A fuzzy synthetic evaluation process is then carried out to identify the risk level of an evaluation target, an urban rail transit station, or line section. A case study on the Beijing URT Line 8 Olympic Center Station is conducted to illustrate the process of evaluation. The results show that the risk level is high and it becomes acceptable only after countermeasures are taken. Potential countermeasures regarding facility capacity, protection area management, and monitoring/inspection are then briefly discussed.
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      Examining the Impact of Adverse Weather on Urban Rail Transit Facilities on the Basis of Fault Tree Analysis and Fuzzy Synthetic Evaluation

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    contributor authorJiaqi Ma
    contributor authorYan Bai
    contributor authorJianfeng Shen
    contributor authorFang Zhou
    date accessioned2017-05-08T22:02:38Z
    date available2017-05-08T22:02:38Z
    date copyrightMarch 2014
    date issued2014
    identifier other%28asce%29up%2E1943-5444%2E0000042.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/69661
    description abstractThe increasingly frequent extreme weather disasters caused by global climate change have attracted more attention to adverse weather’s effect on infrastructure systems. This paper aims to establish an integrated approach to assessing adverse weather’s effect on urban rail transit facilities and to provide decision makers with a powerful tool to analyze potential risks and allocate limited sources for risk management. First, fault tree analysis is used to understand where the risks are, how the risks will occur, and what factors have the most significant effects by analyzing all possible basic events. All wind-, rain-, and snow-related adverse weather, along with human-related factors (construction leftover problems and design drawbacks), are found to potentially cause great risks. Adverse impact scenarios are summarized based on the fault tree analysis. Next, an analytic hierarchical process (AHP)–based fuzzy synthetic evaluation model is established to assess the risk level based on an evaluation index system. AHP is used to calculate the weights between the indices for each adverse weather factor. A fuzzy synthetic evaluation process is then carried out to identify the risk level of an evaluation target, an urban rail transit station, or line section. A case study on the Beijing URT Line 8 Olympic Center Station is conducted to illustrate the process of evaluation. The results show that the risk level is high and it becomes acceptable only after countermeasures are taken. Potential countermeasures regarding facility capacity, protection area management, and monitoring/inspection are then briefly discussed.
    publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
    titleExamining the Impact of Adverse Weather on Urban Rail Transit Facilities on the Basis of Fault Tree Analysis and Fuzzy Synthetic Evaluation
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume140
    journal issue3
    journal titleJournal of Transportation Engineering, Part A: Systems
    identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)TE.1943-5436.0000630
    treeJournal of Transportation Engineering, Part A: Systems:;2014:;Volume ( 140 ):;issue: 003
    contenttypeFulltext
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