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10-story wooden building withstands 100 earthquakes in test

VnExpressVnExpress08/06/2023


The wooden building was built to full size, standing on a 93-square-meter test platform and withstood multiple earthquake-simulated shakings.

TallWood wooden building undergoes shake table testing in San Diego in May. Photo: Sandy Huffaker/Bloomberg

TallWood wooden building undergoes “shake table” testing in San Diego in May. Photo: Sandy Huffaker/Bloomberg

The 114-foot-tall wooden building is the tallest structure ever to be subjected to simulated earthquakes on the world's largest high-performance "shake table," which uses hydraulic actuators to move a steel platform to simulate seismic forces. The shake table tests took place at the University of California San Diego campus as part of the TallWood Project, Bloomberg reported on June 6.

The TallWood project is testing the seismic performance of tall buildings made of mass timber – a material made from layers of wood glued together. Mass timber is becoming increasingly popular as a more sustainable alternative to carbon-intensive concrete and steel.

The 10-story wooden building has already experienced more than 100 earthquakes, and that number will continue to rise before the testing ends in August. "The building is experiencing earthquakes that it would never experience unless it had a lifespan of about 5,000 years," said Thomas Robinson, founder of Lever Architecture, the US firm that designed TallWood.

The first three floors of the 34-meter-high building are clad in orange and silver panels around the glass windows. The rest of the building is open, with four horizontal rocking walls on each floor designed to minimize structural damage during an earthquake. The team also designed the interior walls and staircases to withstand strong shaking and installed sensors throughout the building. Two five-story metal guard towers stand on one side, and cables anchor the building to the ground on the other to prevent it from collapsing during the test.

Two guard towers of a wooden building during testing. Photo: Sandy Huffaker/Bloomberg

Two guard towers of a wooden building during testing. Photo: Sandy Huffaker/Bloomberg

On a May morning, engineers programmed a shaking table to recreate two earthquake disasters. The first was the 6.7-magnitude quake in Los Angeles in 1994. In just 20 seconds, the disaster caused more than $40 billion in damage as buildings and highways collapsed, killing 60 people. The second was the 7.7-magnitude quake in Taiwan in 1999, which destroyed many concrete and steel skyscrapers and killed more than 2,400 people.

After half an hour, experts deemed the building safe to enter. Shiling Pei, principal investigator for the TallWood Project and associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at the Colorado School of Mines, inspected the third-floor walls and floors. “This is exactly the result we expected, no structural damage. That means the building can be used again quickly,” Pei said.

Avoiding costly structural repairs and getting buildings back up and running quickly helped reduce the economic and social costs of the earthquake, Robinson said. He also said the TallWood building’s outer walls remained straight despite the violent shaking.

Once the earthquake testing is complete, the building will be dismantled and its components recycled to build other test structures. The team hopes the results will spur the construction of more high-rise mass timber buildings by demonstrating their strength.

Thu Thao (According to Bloomberg )



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