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Fires in buildings have always been a threat to human life and property. The threat increases
as larger numbers of people live and work in bigger buildings throughout the world. Professor
Buchanan’s interest in structural fire engineering was initiated by Professor Brady Williamson
in the 1970s at the University of California at Berkeley, and developed during his subsequent
career as a practising structural engineer, then as an academic. Dr Abu was introduced to the
subject by Professor Ian Burgess and Professor Roger Plank at the University of Sheffield in
2004, and has since worked with a number of consultants in the field.
New Zealand became one of the first countries to adopt a performance‐based building code
in the late 1980s, stimulating a demand for qualified fire engineers. This led to the establishment of a Master’s Degree in Fire Engineering at the University of Canterbury, where one of
the core courses is structural fire engineering, now taught by Dr Abu. The lecture notes for that
course have grown into this book. Many masters and PhD students have conducted research
which has contributed to our knowledge of fire safety, and much of that is reported here.
Professor Buchanan and Dr Abu have both been involved in many problems of fire safety
and fire resistance, designing fire resisting components for buildings, assisting manufacturers
of fire protecting materials, and serving on national fire safety committees.
Preparation of this book would not have been possible without the help of many people.
We wish to thank Charley Fleischmann, Michael Spearpoint, Peter Moss, Rajesh Dhakal and
other colleagues in the Department of Civil and Natural Resources Engineering at the
University of Canterbury, and a large number of graduate students.
Many people provided helpful comments on the text, figures, and underlying concepts,
especially Philip Xie, Melody Callahan, and a large number of friends and colleagues in the
international structural fire engineering community.
This book is only a beginning; the problem of fire safety is very old and will not go away.
We hope that this book helps to encourage rational improvements to structural fire safety in
buildings throughout the world.
The second edition has been a long time coming because of devastating earthquakes in
Christchurch and other unforeseen difficulties. We hope that it has been worth the wai |
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