ENHANCING EARTHQUAKE RESILIENCE IN TRADITIONAL BUILDING STRUCTURAL VULNERABILITYANALYSIS By INTEGRATING FIELD SURVEY
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Abstract
Traditional construction practices such as dry-stone masonry and timber-
newlinelaced stone systems remain widespread across the seismically active Himalayan
newlineregions of Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, and Kashmir. These vernacular
newlinemethods, developed over generations using local materials, are still prevalent due to
newlinetheir cost-effectiveness and cultural familiarity. However, in the face of frequent
newlineseismic activity, their structural safety is increasingly under scrutiny, especially
newlinegiven the lack of engineered detailing and formal design standards.
newlineThis study undertakes a detailed investigation into the seismic vulnerabilities of
newlinethese building typologies through extensive field surveys, documentation of
newlineconstruction features, and structural assessments. Timber-laced systems demonstrated
newlineinherent resilience due to elements like horizontal tie beams and reduced upper-storey
newlinemass, while common deficiencies included flexible diaphragms, poor wall anchorage,
newlineand out-of-plane wall failures. In unmortared dry-stone buildings, particularly in
newlineKashmir and Sikkim, seismic risk was found to be amplified by the irregular stone
newlinegeometry, absence of mortar, and lack of through-stones.
newlineTo evaluate their structural behavior, representative models of dry-stone
newlinebuildings were analyzed using RFEM software. Modal analysis revealed stress
newlineconcentrations around openings and deformation zones vulnerable under seismic
newlineloads. Based on the combined insights from field observations and numerical
newlineanalysis, a set of context-sensitive seismic strengthening strategies was developed.
newlineThese included timber bracing, lightweight roofing, plank flooring, and CFRP
newlineapplication designed to improve resilience while respecting traditional construction
newlinelogic. All retrofit measures were illustrated using detailed sketches prepared in
newlineInkscape for field-level applicability.
newline