david32
Structural
- Feb 5, 2004
- 3
Could someone who is familiar with the site-specific procedure for determining ground motion accelerations provide some details about the analysis?
The IBC says, "A site-specific study shall account for the regional seismicity and geology; the expected recurrence rates and maximum magnitudes of events on known faults and source zones; the location of the site with respect to these; near source effects if any; and the characteristics of subsurface site conditions."
This sounds very complex to me and I didn't think that it was done very frequently. But evidently, it is performed more than I thought. I've heard that geotechs are charging around $2000-$3000 for the analysis, so it must be less in depth than I originally envisioned it.
The USGS's acceleration contours that account for the regional seismicity and geology are developed from a complex process including a large database of earthquakes, many attenuation relationships, paleoseismic investigations, and other complicated methods. Can the geotech's $3000 analysis of the seismicity be more "accurate" than the USGS's method?
Is the procedure really just a more detailed analysis of the site coefficients (Fa & Fv)? Does the software used by the geotech just 'tweak' the data from the USGS? What software is used? Are the ground accelerations determined by a site-specific analysis lower than the IBC's because less conservative models and assumptions are used?
Thanks
The IBC says, "A site-specific study shall account for the regional seismicity and geology; the expected recurrence rates and maximum magnitudes of events on known faults and source zones; the location of the site with respect to these; near source effects if any; and the characteristics of subsurface site conditions."
This sounds very complex to me and I didn't think that it was done very frequently. But evidently, it is performed more than I thought. I've heard that geotechs are charging around $2000-$3000 for the analysis, so it must be less in depth than I originally envisioned it.
The USGS's acceleration contours that account for the regional seismicity and geology are developed from a complex process including a large database of earthquakes, many attenuation relationships, paleoseismic investigations, and other complicated methods. Can the geotech's $3000 analysis of the seismicity be more "accurate" than the USGS's method?
Is the procedure really just a more detailed analysis of the site coefficients (Fa & Fv)? Does the software used by the geotech just 'tweak' the data from the USGS? What software is used? Are the ground accelerations determined by a site-specific analysis lower than the IBC's because less conservative models and assumptions are used?
Thanks