Title: Fragility of Buildings in Thailand Damaged by
1Fragility of Buildings in Thailand Damaged by
Indian Ocean Tsunami and Recovery after One Year
Assistant Professor Anat Ruangrassamee,
Ph.D. Center of Excellence in Earthquake
Engineering and Vibration
Department of Civil EngineeringChulalongkorn
University Bangkok, Thailand
2Outline of Presentation
Overview of Damage Damage Database Fragility of
Buildings Subjected to Tsunami and
Current Research in Tsunami Engineering
Recovery after Tsunami
Peoples Evacuation on 28 March and 24 July 2005
Summary
3From LANSAT, GISTDA
Affected Areas
Six provinces on the west coastof Southern
Thailand
Ranong
Phang-Nga
Krabi
Phuket
Trang
As of March 24, 2005 http//www.disaster.go.th
Satun
4Runup
From LANSAT, GISTDA
Ban-Nam-Kem, Phang-Nga
Water level
Ranong
4.8 m
Ground level
Ban-Bang-Niang, Khaolak, Phang-Nga
8.1 m
Phang-Nga
12 m
4.8 m
Krabi
Phuket
4.3 m
Sirinart National Park, Phuket
5-6 m
Trang
2.5 m
Satun
2.6 m
5Major Damaged Area
Khaolak, Phang-nga
2.5 km
12 km
1 km
IKONOS Image
6Details of Investigation
Investigated Structures Buildings Retaining
Structures Roads Bridges Phuket International
Airport Ports Power Systems Water Supply
Systems Waste Water Treatment Systems
Site Phang-Nga Phuket Krabi (Phi Phi
Island) Date 29-30 December 2004 7-10 January
2005 29 January 4 February 2005 23 March 1
April 2005 18-19 May 2005 3-4 August 2005 12-13
October 2005
7Damage to Retaining Structures
In the location where houses are constructed
close to the shoreline, retaining walls are
needed. The failure of the wall results in rapid
scouring. Spread footings become unsupported.
30 December 2004
30 January 2005
8Damage to Bridges
Kamala Beach, Phuket
3mx30m pedestrian bridge collapsed.
9Damage to Bridges
Collapse of bridge barriers due to lateral force
actingin the direction not considered in the
design
Direction of force
10Damage to Buildings
Wall punching
Erosion
Bending failure
Lateral bending of beams
11Database of Tsunami-Induced Structural Damage
The 26 December 2004 tsunami is the real test for
the resistance of buildings against a tsunami.
Systematic and quantitative damage evaluation can
provide informationon the proper design of
structures against tsunamis.
The damage evaluation criteria for
post-earthquake structural inspectionwas
modified for post-tsunami structural inspection
by includingtypical tsunami-induced damage. And
the web-based database system was developed.
12Database of Tsunami-Induced Structural Damage
Classification of Damage Levels of Columns
13Database of Tsunami-Induced Structural Damage
http//evr.eng.chula.ac.th/earthquake/DamageSurvey
/
14Database of Tsunami-Induced Structural Damage
Function of buildings
No. of stories of buildings
Total number of buildings 94
15Database of Tsunami-Induced Structural Damage
Overall damage
Damage to walls
16Database of Tsunami-Induced Structural Damage
Kamala Beach, Phuket
No. of buildings 77
17Fragility of Buildings Subjected to Tsunami
Relation between damage level and inundation
height
18Fragility of Buildings Subjected to Tsunami
Relation between averaged damage level and
inundation height
D
H
19Lateral Load Resistance of RC Column
To calibrate the visually-inspected damage to
actual structural performance,the loading test
of a RC column was conducted.
20Details of Tested RC Column
21Lateral Load Resistance of RC Column
1 drift
2 drift
4 drift
22Relation of Crack Width with Some Parameters
Resolution 0.05 mm
Crack measurement
Resolution 0.02 mm
Crack width vs Drift ratio
Crack width vs Normalized load
C
L
23Relation of Crack Width with Some Parameters
At the drift ratio of 6.6
24Tsunami Simulation of Runup in Khaolak
In collaboration with Tsunami Engineering
Laboratory, Tohoku University
Domain of computation in spherical coordinates
Domain of computation in cartesian coordinates
Rupture
25Bathymetry and Topography
26Surface Deformation
-2
4
2 rupture planes
Proposed by Tsunami Engineering
Laboratory, Tohoku University
27Simulation Results
Phang-Nga (6-8m)
Phuket (6m)
Nicoba Island (15m)
Aceh (25m)
Faults
28Simulation Results at Khaolak
Pakarang (Coral) Cape
Receding water
Incoming wave
29Evacuation Route
Evacuation route
Safe place
By Department of Geology, Chulalongkorn
University, Department of Mineral
ResourcesMinistry of Natural Resources and
Environment
30Ongoing Research Projects
Calibration Friction Fault model
Numerical Simulation of Phuket/Khaolak
Observed data
Assume possible rupture mechanisms
Real-time hazard map by parallel computing
- Hazard map
- Inundated area
- Runup height
- Arrival time
- Velocity
Ranges of velocitiesand tsunami heights are
known.
SOFT MEASURES
HARD MEASURES
Formulation for estimating tsunami forces on
structures
Experiment
Analysis
of tsunami forces on structures
Tsunami damage database
Tsunami-resistant design criteria - detailing,
configurations
31Recovery after Tsunami
Kamala Beach
Courtesy of Mr. Phaisarn Pongnaritsorn
25 March 2005
26 December 2004
32Recovery after Tsunami
Patong Beach
Unknown source
26 December 2004
25 March 2005
33Recovery after Tsunami
Patong Beach
Unknown source
25 March 2005
26 December 2004
34Recovery after Tsunami
Patong Beach
31 January 2005
12 October 2005
35Recovery after Tsunami
Some warning signs were installed.
19 May 2005
36Recovery after Tsunami
Warning towers at Patong Beach
62 towers will be completed by March 2006.
19 May 2005
37Questionnaire on 28 Mar and 24 July Evacuation
24 July 2005
28 March 2005
77
38Questionnaire on 28 Mar and 24 July Evacuation
24 July 2005
28 March 2005
38
29
Problems Traffic jam and accidents Most people
did not walk. People dont know evacuation
routes. In some tsunami-prone areas, people did
not hear warning.
39Summary
- Hazard maps are the urgent materials needed to
be developed to let people know their risks.
- More education to local community about
preparedness and evacuation is required. A
workshop was done in Phuket to educate community
leaders and related governmental offices in the
end of September. The next workshop would
focus on utilization of tsunami hazard maps,
evacuation, general knowledge - for local people.
- In some places, evacuation buildings and design
guidelines are required. - We need to clarify the design force and
criteria for tsunami-resistant design via a
series of experiment and analyses.
40Summary
- People are forgetting the disaster. Drills or
memorial activities needs to be arranged.
Department of Geology, Chulalongkorn University
41Acknowledgements
All local people who share experience gained from
their losses ASCE Earthquake Investigation
Committee (USA) Institute of Civil Engineers
(UK) Chulalongkorn University Department of
Public Works and Urban Planning, Ministry of
Interior Affairs Public Works and Urban Planning
Bureau in Phuket and Phang-Nga Council of
Engineers Phang-Nga Navy Base Phuket
International Airport Airport Authority of
Thailand Patong Municipality Patong Municipality
Wastewater Treatment Plant
42Acknowledgements
Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and
Transport Port and Airport Research
Institute Hirogawa town Miyagi Prefecture
Government Miyagi International
Association Professor Fumihiko Imamura Assoc.
Professor Shunichi Koshimura and all members in
Tsunami Engineering Laboratory, Tohoku
University JMA Sendai Observatory Tohoku Regional
Bureau, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, and
Transports Kesennuma City Miyagi Fire Defense and
Prevention Division, Heliport.
43Thank You
Center of Excellence in Earthquake Engineering
and Vibration Department of Civil
Engineering Faculty of Engineering Chulalongkorn
University http//evr.eng.chula.ac.th The
information about database system, fragility, and
test results was submitted forpossible
publication in Earthquake Spectra. Investigation
on Tsunami-Induced Damage and Fragility of
Buildings in Thailand Anat Ruangrassamee,
Hideaki Yanagisawa, Piyawat Foitong, Panitan
Lukkunaprasit, Shunichi Koshimura, Fumihiko
Imamura