Aseismic and Anti-Tsunami Upgrades of Existing Coastal Levees and Seawalls in High Risk Regions

- Organization:
- Deep Foundations Institute
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 2037 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2017
Abstract
"Japan’s Great Tohoku Earthquake and the immediately following tsunami of March 11, 2011 killed more than fifteen thousand people and destroyed numerous buildings and infrastructures in the northeastern part of the country.In addition to reconstruction projects in the areas where the earthquake and tsunami hit, other seismically vulnerable regions in the country have started building new and more robust facilities as well as upgrading existing coastal structures so they will be able to cope with such deadly seismic and hydraulic force. This paper will highlight two different types of aseismic and anti-tsunami levee upgrades currently under construction on the coast of Kochi Prefecture, approximately 500 miles west of Tokyo. The first type is the installation of double sheet pile walls in existing seawalls. The second type is to drive tubular piles into existing levee structures for reinforcing them. Both sheet and tubular piles are being driven by the Press-in Piling Method without removing or compromising the function of the existing structures. 1. BACKGROUNDGreat Tohoku Earthquake of March 11, 2011 caused severe damage to many structures. ASCE’s survey of damaged coastal structures conducted immediately after the disaster by Ewing, et al. (2014) categorizes failure modes of the structures in the following manner.?Overtopping without structural failure.?Overtopping with structural damage or failure.?Wave uplift forces.?Movement of structure off foundation from sliding, rotation, or overtopping.?Impact loads.?Hydrostatic pressure.?Supercritical flows.?Scour.?Erosion.?Abutments end effects.?Subsidence."
Citation
APA:
(2017) Aseismic and Anti-Tsunami Upgrades of Existing Coastal Levees and Seawalls in High Risk RegionsMLA: Aseismic and Anti-Tsunami Upgrades of Existing Coastal Levees and Seawalls in High Risk Regions. Deep Foundations Institute, 2017.