Abstract:
This book is intended to help professionals of a wide range of disciplines in their attempts
to reduce the social and economic risks of earthquakes. Earthquake risk reduction involves
so many issues in planning, design, regulation, quality control and risk assessment, that
it is difficult for any individual to gain a full perspective on the issue, or for any society
to move forward in the quest at the desired speed.
The principal objectives are to:
• discuss the chief aspects of earthquake risk and their evaluation;
• present methods of reducing or managing a range of earthquake risks;
• give guidance on topics where no generally accepted method is currently available;
• suggest procedures to be adopted in earthquake regions having no official zoning or
lateral force regulations; and
• indicate some of the more important specialist literature.
The general principles of this book apply to the whole built environment, while the more
detailed sections relate to selected aspects of it. Whereas an attempt has been made to
provide guidance on most of the more important issues, the coverage cannot be exhaustive
in a single book.
The author published the predecessor to this book, under the title Earthquake Risk
Reduction, in 2003. However because of the popularity of the previous title Earthquake
Resistant Design, a new title combining the titles of my 1977, 1987 and 2003 books has
been chosen for the present edition. In the six years or so since writing the 2003 edition,
much progress has continued to be made in understanding earthquakes and in how to build
more safely. In some areas of study great developments have occurred, such as in various
aspects of seismic hazard, hazard analysis, Damage Avoidance Design and retrofitting
techniques. However, one of the great difficulties for the designers of earthquake resistant
property arises simply from the enormous volume of literature being produced on each
of the many specialisms within the overall subject area. Hopefully, this book will help
some of us to find our way better through this maze.
This book was written mainly, but not only, from the standpoint of designers trying
to keep a broad perspective on the total process, starting from the nature of the loading
through to the details of construction. To this end, the successful overall format of my pr