Towards Urban Resilience: A Multi-Criteria Analysis of Seismic Vulnerability in Iasi City (Romania)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Area
3. Materials and Methods
- High risk (R1)—Risk of collapsing in case of an earthquake with a magnitude higher than 7;
- Average risk (R2)—No major risk of collapsing in case of earthquake, but risk of structural damages;
- Low risk (R3)—Small damages in walls or decorations that can endanger the safety of the inhabitants; and
- No risk (R4)—No major risk in case of earthquake. Buildings with no risk were not taken into consideration in the present study.
4. Results
4.1. Physical Vulnerability
4.2. Social-Economic Vulnerability
4.3. Systemic Vulnerability
4.4. Integrated Assessment of Vulnerability
5. Discussion and Conclusions
- Retrofitting vulnerable buildings in order to reduce the physical damage of the built environment;
- Making technical audits for more buildings that might be vulnerable in order to provide reports indicating the category of risk in case of an earthquake;
- Reducing spatial barriers and discontinuities in order to provide fluent transport and effective intervention in case of disaster;
- Planning places for gathering and relocating densely populated area after an earthquake, increasing potential for rescue and supplementing centers of intervention and health care (including the regional hospital in the western part of the city); and
- Informing and instructing the sensitive population in order to properly react in extreme situations caused by earthquakes [53].
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Indicator/ACRONIM | Description | Data Source | References |
---|---|---|---|
Seismic risk categories/RISK | Established by the official experts’ reports made until 2015 by taking into account physical characteristics and state of buildings | Iasi City hall—public information | [30] |
Age of buildings/AGE | It also helps determine the type of construction and materials in a certain area | City hall site, GIS database that included information from other scientific papers, older maps | [10,40,41,42] |
Number of floors/FLOORS | It distinguishes the percent of buildings with one or two floors from those that have 3 or more floors | Field research, Google Street | [10,42] |
Structural types of buildings/MATERIAL | The materials have different stiffness, strength and ductility capacity to inertial forces that exert stresses. Two main categories were taken into account: (a) unreinforced masonry buildings; and (b) reinforced concrete buildings | Existing databases, field research | [40,42] |
Total area of exterior walls/WALLS | The walls provide the primary lateral resistance/stability to earthquake loads. Determined by calculations considering the perimeter and the height of buildings, also taking into account the average percentage of openings which could be an evidence of soft-story mechanisms | GIS database, own calculations | [17] |
Thermic rehabilitation/THERMO | Improving thermo-isolation should succeed or be a part of the consolidation process of buildings. Otherwise it represents a drawback for a future structural rehabilitation | Google street, field research | [22,28,43] |
The state of building structure/REHABIL | Obtained from numerical simulation or field survey to assess damage of a structure | Former studies, field research | [31,41] |
Terrain landslide susceptibility/SLIDE | Gives an insight on the increasing damages caused by associating earthquakes to geology, slope and land use | Published work data | [44] |
Indicator/ACRONIM | Description | Data Source | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Population density/INHAB_DENS | A high concentration of population within a relatively small area can increase damages in case of a strong seismic event | Census data 2011, field research, estimation | [14] |
The percent of elder population/ELD_POP | Elder population is more sensitive to injures and life losses, especially when there are old people living alone (>70 years old) | Census data 2011, field research, estimation | [11] |
Total number of inhabitants/TOT_POP | Gives an indication on total human losses or injures that could take place in case of a disastrous earthquake | Census data 2011, field research, estimation | [40] |
Empirical economic losses/ECON_VALUE | Based on the estimated value of each building, it takes into account specific indicators of building values distribution and presumes, in addition, that, generally, the more expensive the residence the higher the value of the assets that could be subject to destruction in case of earthquake | GIS database, own calculations, real estate market and minimum prices established | [42] |
Indicator/ACRONIM | Description | Data Source | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
The density of buildings/BUILT_DENS | Density and height of buildings, at district scale, could facilitate the occurrence of barriers in case of collapse | GIS Database, Google Street views | [27] |
Distance to hospitals/HOSP_DIST | Distance from hospitals and trauma centers gives a certain level of population vulnerability to adverse health outcomes just after a major earthquake | GIS Database, Google Street views | [11] |
Distance to emergency services/EMERG_DIST | Time for emergency services (ambulance, SMURD, firemen) is highly important in order to get to damaged building and contribute to saving lives | GIS Database, Google Street views | [3,11] |
Scales | Degree of Preferences | Explanation |
---|---|---|
1 | Equally | Two activities contribute equally to the objective |
3 | Moderately | Experience and judgment slightly to moderately favor one activity over another |
5 | Strongly | Experience and judgment strongly or essentially favor one activity over another |
7 | Very strongly | An activity is strongly favored over another and its dominance is shown in practice |
9 | Extremely | The evidence of favoring one activity over another is of the highest degree possible of an affirmation |
2, 4, 6, 8 | Intermediate values | Used to represent compromises between the preferences in weights 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 |
Reciprocals | Opposites | Used for inverse comparison |
Indicator | Weight (Priority) | CR | Category | Weight (Priority) | CR | Final index |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AGE | 22.8% | 0.042 | Physical vulnerability | 59.5% | 0.006 | Integrated seismic vulnerability index |
MATERIAL | 37.6% | |||||
WALLS | 13.7% | |||||
FLOORS | 8.7% | |||||
SLIDE | 8.8% | |||||
REHABIL | 5.7% | |||||
THERMO | 2.7% | |||||
INHAB_DENS | 29.6% | 0.008 | Social-economic vulnerability | 27.6% | ||
ELD_POP | 6.9% | |||||
TOT_POP | 51.5% | |||||
ECON_VALUE | 12.1% | |||||
EMERG_DIST | 60.0% | 0.000 | Systemic vulnerability | 12.8% | ||
HOSP_DIST | 30.0% | |||||
BUILD_DENS | 10.0% |
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Banica, A.; Rosu, L.; Muntele, I.; Grozavu, A. Towards Urban Resilience: A Multi-Criteria Analysis of Seismic Vulnerability in Iasi City (Romania). Sustainability 2017, 9, 270. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9020270
Banica A, Rosu L, Muntele I, Grozavu A. Towards Urban Resilience: A Multi-Criteria Analysis of Seismic Vulnerability in Iasi City (Romania). Sustainability. 2017; 9(2):270. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9020270
Chicago/Turabian StyleBanica, Alexandru, Lucian Rosu, Ionel Muntele, and Adrian Grozavu. 2017. "Towards Urban Resilience: A Multi-Criteria Analysis of Seismic Vulnerability in Iasi City (Romania)" Sustainability 9, no. 2: 270. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9020270
APA StyleBanica, A., Rosu, L., Muntele, I., & Grozavu, A. (2017). Towards Urban Resilience: A Multi-Criteria Analysis of Seismic Vulnerability in Iasi City (Romania). Sustainability, 9(2), 270. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9020270