Litcius/Paper detail

Unzipping flood vulnerability and functionality loss: tale of struggle for existence of riparian buildings

Dipendra Gautam, Rabindra Adhikari, Suraj Gautam, Vishnu Prasad Pandey, Bhesh Raj Thapa, Suraj Lamichhane, Rocky Talchabhadel, Saraswati Thapa, Sunil Niraula, Komal Aryal, Pravin Lamsal, Subash Bastola, Sanjay Kumar Sah, Shanti Kala Subedi, Bijaya Puri, Bidur Kandel, Pratap Sapkota, Rajesh Rupakhety

2022Natural Hazards26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Floods pose significant risk to riparian buildings as evidenced during many historical events. Although structural resilience to tsunami flooding is well studied in the literature, high-velocity and debris-laden floods in steep terrains are not considered adequately so far. Historical floods in steep terrains necessitate the need for flood vulnerability analysis of buildings. To this end, we report vulnerability of riparian-reinforced concrete buildings using forensic damage interpretations and empirical/analytical vulnerability analyses. Furthermore, we propose the concept and implications of functionality loss due to flooding in residential reinforced concrete (RC) buildings using empirical data. Fragility functions using inundation depth and momentum flux are presented for RC buildings considering a recent flooding event in Nepal. The results show that flow velocity and sediment load, rather than hydrostatic load, govern the damages in riparian RC buildings. However, at larger inundation depth, hydrostatic force alone may collapse some of the RC buildings.

Topics & Concepts

Flood mythFlooding (psychology)Riparian zoneFlood stageVulnerability (computing)Natural hazardTerrainDebris flowResilience (materials science)Environmental scienceDebrisGeotechnical engineeringGeologyForensic engineeringCivil engineeringEngineeringGeographyCartographyComputer scienceHabitat100-year floodEcologyComputer securityBiologyPhysicsArchaeologyOceanographyPsychologyPsychotherapistThermodynamicsFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementEarthquake and Tsunami EffectsTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research