Quantitative Evaluation of the Damage To Rc Buildings Caused by the 2023 Southeast Turkey Earthquake Sequence

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Date

2024

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications Inc.

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

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No
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Top 1%
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Top 10%
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Top 1%

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Abstract

Data from 15 earthquakes that occurred in 12 different countries are presented showing that, without better drift control, structures built with building codes allowing large seismic drifts are likely to keep leaving a wide wake of damage ranging from cracked partitions to building overturning. Following the earthquake sequence affecting southeast Turkey in 2023, a team led by Committee 133 of the American Concrete Institute surveyed nearly 250 reinforced concrete buildings in the area extending from Antakya to Malatya. Buildings ranging from 2 to 16 stories were surveyed to assess their damage and evaluate the robustness of their structures in relation to overall stiffness, as measured by the relative cross-sectional areas of structural walls and columns. The majority of the buildings were estimated to have been built in the past 10 years. Yet, the structures surveyed were observed to have amounts of structural walls and columns comparable with amounts reported after the Erzincan (1992), Duzce (1999), and Bingol (2003) Earthquakes in Turkey. These amounts are, on average, much smaller than the wall and column amounts used in Chile and Japan. Because of that lack of robustness and given the intensities of the motions reported from Antakya to Malatya (with 10 stations with peak ground velocity (PGV) of 100 cm/s or more), it is concluded that structures in this region experienced large drifts. Excessive drift (1) exposed a myriad of construction and detailing problems leading to severe structural damage and collapse, (2) induced overturning caused by p-delta for some buildings, and (3) caused widespread damage to brittle masonry partitions. The main lesson is simple: ductility is necessary but not sufficient. It is urgent that seismic drift limits are tightened in high-seismicity regions worldwide. © The Author(s) 2024.

Description

Keywords

column index, drift, nonstructural damage, peak ground velocity, Priority index, wall index, Building codes, Concrete buildings, Earthquakes, Structural analysis, Walls (structural partitions), Column index, Drift, Earthquake sequences, Non-structural damage, Peak ground velocity, Priority index, Quantitative evaluation, Seismic drift, Structural walls, Wall index, Reinforced concrete, Peak ground velocity, Wall index, Column index, Drift, Nonstructural damage, Priority index

Fields of Science

0211 other engineering and technologies, 02 engineering and technology

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1
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OpenCitations Citation Count
24

Source

Earthquake Spectra

Volume

40

Issue

Start Page

505

End Page

530
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Citations

CrossRef : 47

Scopus : 44

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 45

SCOPUS™ Citations

44

checked on Mar 13, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

38

checked on Mar 13, 2026

Page Views

8

checked on Mar 13, 2026

Downloads

8

checked on Mar 13, 2026

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15.0083

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