Thursday, August 28, 2008

New ISO standard for safe, long-lasting buildings and structures

ISO has published a new standard to help engineers, builders, and regulators to design structures that are safe and resistant to failure due to environmental and mechanical stresses, and to material degradation.

Buildings, civil engineering works, industrial structures, and their components should be conceived, constructed, inspected, maintained and repaired in such a way that, under foreseeable environmental conditions, they maintain their required performance during their design lives with sufficient reliability for the safety and comfort of users and the intended use of the structure.

ISO 13823:2008—General Principles on the Design of Structures for Durability specifies general principles and recommends procedures for the verification of the durability of structures subject to known or foreseeable environmental actions, including mechanical actions, causing material degradation leading to failure of performance. It will help to ensure reliability of performance throughout the service life of the structure.

This International Standard has the following objectives:

  • to improve the evaluation and design of structures for durability by the incorporation of building science principles into structural engineering practice, and
  • to provide a framework for the development of mathematical models to predict the service life of components of the structure.
Prof. A.M. Brandt, Chair of ISO/TC 98, Bases for Design of Structures, comments, "The general principles in the verification and design of structures and components for durability in this International Standard should be used whenever a minimum service life is required, for new structures as well as for the assessment of existing structures."

The standard is intended to serve a similar harmonization role that ISO 2394:1998, General Principles on Reliability for Structures, has had over the past 30 years for the verification and design of structures against failure due to mechanical stress, ranging from gravity to wind, snow, and earthquake.

The goal is to ensure that all analytical models are incorporated into the limit states method, the same as currently used for the verification and design of structures.

ISO 13823:2008 covers the following topics:
  • basic concept for verifying durability,
  • durability requirements,
  • design life of a structure and its components,
  • predicted service life, and
  • strategies for durability design.

This International Standard does not directly address sustainability for structures. Most considerations of sustainability, such as the choice of material as it affects waste and energy consumption, are outside its scope. But indirectly, durable structures improve the sustainability of infrastructure.

ISO 13823—General Principles on the Design of Structures for Durability, was developed by ISO technical committee ISO/TC 98, Bases for Design of Structures, Subcommittee SC 2, Reliability of Structures. For more information visit www.iso.org.

source: http://www.gostructural.com/

1 comment:

Abas KS said...

Oh, yeah. Its good news. Safety first!

Disclaimer

Civil Engineer's World claims no credit for any images/videos featured on this site unless otherwise noted. All visual content is a Copyright to it’s respectful owners(links). Civil Engineer's World is in no way responsible for or has control of the content of any external web links. Information on this site may contain errors or inaccuracies and Civil Engineer's World does not make warranty as to the correctness or reliability of the webs' content. If you own rights to any of the images and contents, and do not wish them to appear on this site, please contact Civil Engineer World by and they will be promptly removed.

On posts about Financial Literacy:
Any forward looking statements, market predictions, analysis written on this site should be treated with caution. The market may move in the direction different from any person's opinion. In no occasion that I am responsible to your loss based on the details you have read on this website. Investment requires due diligence, study and experience before gains can be achieved and the readers are responsible for the trades they are executing. Contents of the page may be changed without prior notice.