Simulating Historical Earthquakes in Existing Cities for Fostering Design of Resilient and Sustainable Communities: The Ljubljana Case

The seismic exposure of urban areas today is much higher than centuries ago. The 2020 Zagreb earthquake demonstrated that European cities are vulnerable even to moderate earthquakes, a fact that has been known to earthquake-engineering experts for decades. However, alerting decision-makers to the se...

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Main Authors: Anže Babič, Matjaž Dolšek, Jure Žižmond
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-07-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/14/7624
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spelling doaj-8162b1148604401eba83641ae9614d3d2021-07-23T14:07:10ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-07-01137624762410.3390/su13147624Simulating Historical Earthquakes in Existing Cities for Fostering Design of Resilient and Sustainable Communities: The Ljubljana CaseAnže Babič0Matjaž Dolšek1Jure Žižmond2Faculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering, University of Ljubljana, 1000 Ljubljana, SloveniaFaculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering, University of Ljubljana, 1000 Ljubljana, SloveniaFaculty of Civil and Geodetic Engineering, University of Ljubljana, 1000 Ljubljana, SloveniaThe seismic exposure of urban areas today is much higher than centuries ago. The 2020 Zagreb earthquake demonstrated that European cities are vulnerable even to moderate earthquakes, a fact that has been known to earthquake-engineering experts for decades. However, alerting decision-makers to the seismic risk issue is very challenging, even when they are aware of historical earthquakes that caused natural catastrophes in the areas of their jurisdiction. To help solve the issue, we introduce a scenario-based risk assessment methodology and demonstrate the consequences of the 1895 Ljubljana earthquake on the existing building stock. We show that a 6.2 magnitude earthquake with an epicentre 5 km north of Ljubljana would cause many deaths and severe damage to the building stock, which would likely lead to direct economic losses higher than 15% of the GDP of the Republic of Slovenia. Such an event would be catastrophic not only for the community directly affected by the earthquake but for the entire country. We have disseminated this information over the course of a year together in addition to formulating a plan for enhancing the community seismic resilience in Slovenia. Hopefully, local decision-makers will act according to their jurisdiction in Slovenia and persuade decision-makers across Europe to update the built environment renovation policy at the European level.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/14/7624earthquakesscenario-based risk assessmentbuilding stockground-motion modelseismic fragilityresilience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anže Babič
Matjaž Dolšek
Jure Žižmond
spellingShingle Anže Babič
Matjaž Dolšek
Jure Žižmond
Simulating Historical Earthquakes in Existing Cities for Fostering Design of Resilient and Sustainable Communities: The Ljubljana Case
Sustainability
earthquakes
scenario-based risk assessment
building stock
ground-motion model
seismic fragility
resilience
author_facet Anže Babič
Matjaž Dolšek
Jure Žižmond
author_sort Anže Babič
title Simulating Historical Earthquakes in Existing Cities for Fostering Design of Resilient and Sustainable Communities: The Ljubljana Case
title_short Simulating Historical Earthquakes in Existing Cities for Fostering Design of Resilient and Sustainable Communities: The Ljubljana Case
title_full Simulating Historical Earthquakes in Existing Cities for Fostering Design of Resilient and Sustainable Communities: The Ljubljana Case
title_fullStr Simulating Historical Earthquakes in Existing Cities for Fostering Design of Resilient and Sustainable Communities: The Ljubljana Case
title_full_unstemmed Simulating Historical Earthquakes in Existing Cities for Fostering Design of Resilient and Sustainable Communities: The Ljubljana Case
title_sort simulating historical earthquakes in existing cities for fostering design of resilient and sustainable communities: the ljubljana case
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-07-01
description The seismic exposure of urban areas today is much higher than centuries ago. The 2020 Zagreb earthquake demonstrated that European cities are vulnerable even to moderate earthquakes, a fact that has been known to earthquake-engineering experts for decades. However, alerting decision-makers to the seismic risk issue is very challenging, even when they are aware of historical earthquakes that caused natural catastrophes in the areas of their jurisdiction. To help solve the issue, we introduce a scenario-based risk assessment methodology and demonstrate the consequences of the 1895 Ljubljana earthquake on the existing building stock. We show that a 6.2 magnitude earthquake with an epicentre 5 km north of Ljubljana would cause many deaths and severe damage to the building stock, which would likely lead to direct economic losses higher than 15% of the GDP of the Republic of Slovenia. Such an event would be catastrophic not only for the community directly affected by the earthquake but for the entire country. We have disseminated this information over the course of a year together in addition to formulating a plan for enhancing the community seismic resilience in Slovenia. Hopefully, local decision-makers will act according to their jurisdiction in Slovenia and persuade decision-makers across Europe to update the built environment renovation policy at the European level.
topic earthquakes
scenario-based risk assessment
building stock
ground-motion model
seismic fragility
resilience
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/14/7624
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