Publication

K4D Helpdesk Report

Seismic Retrofit of Earthquake Damaged Masonry Housing

Published on 15 December 2016

The choice of appropriate repair and/or retrofitting techniques for an earthquake damaged building always requires: 1) a preliminary assessment of the current state of the building, to understand its stability and its intrinsic robustness, to determine whether the repair and strengthening is viable in terms of delivering a safe building; 2) a detailed design of the strengthening and definition of the construction sequence to ensure that the end product performs as assumed in the assessment phase; 3) an assessment of the materials, skills, logistic and economic resources available to implement a specific repair or retrofitting system.

The present document focuses on strengthening methods for masonry structures. It provides a review of available sources in literature useful to support point 1 and provide a number of different suitable methods to fulfil point 2. To address point 3, the reader should review the specific geographic, socio-economic and cultural conditions within which the operations are conducted and determine whether the implementation is feasible to a level of quality which will assure the delivery of a safe building.

The remainder of the document contains an annotated bibliography, the key advantages and drawbacks associated to the most common strengthening techniques for masonry buildings and a set of conclusions summarising the fundamental steps for a successful strengthening process.

Cite this publication

D’Ayala, D. (2016). Seismic retrofit of earthquake damaged masonry housing, K4D Helpdesk Report. Brighton, UK: Institute of Development Studies.

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
authors
D’Ayala, Dina
language
English

Share

Related content

Brief

Designing Social Assistance Programmes for Displaced People

BASIC Research Policy Briefing 6

26 March 2025

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.