Engineering towards a resilient world – managing client expectations

Author: Kalaichelvi Navaratnarajah

Date published

1 April 2016

Price

Standard: £10 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

Back to Previous

Engineering towards a resilient world – managing client expectations

Tag
Author
Kalaichelvi Navaratnarajah
Date published
1 April 2016
Price

Standard: £10 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

The Structural Engineer
Author

Kalaichelvi Navaratnarajah

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 94, Issue 4, 2016, Page(s) 10-15

Date published

1 April 2016

Author

Kalaichelvi Navaratnarajah

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 94, Issue 4, 2016, Page(s) 10-15

Price

Standard: £10 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

This paper on managing client expectations is written with a focus on physical infrastructure in the form of civil engineering structures.

Synopsis

Traditionally, extreme events were predominantly considered for structures where there was a high probability of such events occurring, due to their type and location, or where their failure would have a major consequence e.g. offshore structures or nuclear reactors. Clients for such structures are knowledgeable and confident in defining the event parameters and the performance requirements of their structures both during and just after hazard events. This is based on a rigorous understanding of risk, consequence and the costs associated with lack of resilience and post-event clean-up.

Stakeholders and clients fresh to the subject can struggle to assess the criticality of their asset and set appropriate design requirements for extreme events such as an earthquake, flood, extended fire and explosion, without understanding the subtleties of designing for resilience. Neglecting to engage with this at project inception, before design requirements are determined and procurement is initiated, can lead to unrealistic or caveated tender returns and ultimately fail to achieve a resilient infrastructure solution.

Additional information

Format:
PDF
Pages:
10-15
Publisher:
The Institution of Structural Engineers

Tags

Disaster mitigation, management & recovery Feature Issue 4

Related Resources & Events

The Structural Engineer
FRP retrofit schemes for beam-column joint subassemblies

Assessment and retrofit of deficient reinforced concrete structures using advanced composites

Umut Akguzel describes his research into seismic retrofitting of reinforced concrete structures using advanced composites, which won the Institution's inaugural Research into Practice essay competition in 2019.

Date – 4 January 2022
Author – Umut Akguzel
Price – £10
The Structural Engineer
<h4>And finally... (April 2016)</h4>

And finally... (April 2016)

This month we bring you a question from the Institution's new Structural Behaviour Course. The topic is trusses. Answers will be published in the May issue.

Date – 1 April 2016
Author – Various
Price – £10
The Structural Engineer
<h4>Spotlight on Structures (April 2016)</h4>

Spotlight on Structures (April 2016)

In this section we shine a spotlight on papers recently published in Structures – the Research Journal of The Institution of Structural Engineers.

Date – 1 April 2016
Author – Various
Price – £0