Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 This session will look at how to quantify the impacts of different.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 This session will look at how to quantify the impacts of different."— Presentation transcript:

1 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 This session will look at how to quantify the impacts of different hazards upon housing and infrastructure Assessing building damage 30 mins Bam, Iran 2003

2 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 The key learning objectives of this session are to form an understanding of: 1.Phases of assessment 2.Differences in building damage Session objectives

3 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 The key learning objectives of this session are to form an understanding of: 1.Phases of assessment 2.Differences in building damage Session objectives

4 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Phases of assessment Damage assessment varies over time and needs to be undertaken in series of steps: 1.Preliminary assessment 2.Initial assessment 3.Detailed technical assessment 4.Macro assessment of entire affected area 5.Monitoring 6.Evaluation See session assessment, monitoring evaluation

5 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Before rapid assessment, assessment of building safety, occupancy, loss of life is often undertaken by: Search And Rescue (SAR) teams: deployed immediately after a disaster United Nations Disaster Assessment and Coordination (UNDAC) teams: mobilized rapidly to coordinate the search and rescue operations with the national authorities. Preliminary assessment It is important to contact these teams in order to gain from them information concerning the scope and results of their preliminary assessments.

6 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 SAR teams use standard marking system for buildings: A – name of team, date, time of visit/work B – types of risks encountered (hazardous materials) W water Gas gas leakage Chemchemical products EXPLexplosive materials Ffuels or other inflammable materials electricity risk of collapse radioactivity C – number of dead D – number of people unaccounted for E – number of people saved Preliminary assessment C A B E D

7 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 In the first days of the response, the objective of initial assessment is: 1.to achieve an understanding of the scale of the damage 2.to estimate where the damage is more severe 3.to inform the development of technical assessment criteria and housing damage categories 4.to bring together all available assessment capacity 5.to initiate assessment coordination Initial assessment It is essential to achieve a successful handover to the technical specialists undertaking more detailed assessment.

8 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 The objective is to identify the relative damage to housing and infrastructure in order to inform: 1.levels of assistance 2.forms of assistance 3.scale of assistance 4.location of assistance 5.priorities of assistance 6.vulnerabilities Detailed technical assessment

9 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Macro assessment of entire affected area Damaged must be assessed at a national level in order to inform: 1.strategic planning 2.appeals processes 3.understandings of impacts upon the national and regional economy and environment Governments may agree an approach to macro assessment: following the Indian Ocean tsunami of 26 December 2004, a Tsunami Recovery Impact Assessment and Monitoring System (TRIAMS) was discussed and endorsed by the Global Consortium for Tsunami-Affected Countries IFIs have their own approaches to damage and loss measurement: the World Bank has used the methodology for disaster damage and loss assessment developed by the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (UN-ECLAC), common in that region since 1972 Handbook for Estimating the Socio- Economic and Environmental Effects of Disasters (UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) and the World Bank, 2003)

10 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Housing damages categories Category 0 No damage Category 1Category 2Category 3 Category 4 Minor damage, assistance required Partial damage, can be repaired Severe damage, can be repaired Destroyed, cannot be repaired The categories of damage presented below have been used following conflicts to describe damage to housing, supported by 1-page rapid village and rapid housing assessment forms. Similar categories may be agreed following conflicts and disasters. Different categories may be developed for different building types.

11 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Basic building assessment The following primary information may be gathered during early assessment to inform decisions on priority, what type of assistance is required, and whether repair should be considered: 1.Use 1.a residence 1.d commerce 1.b office 1.e factory 1.c school 1.f hospital 2. Type 2.a stone, adobe 2.d reinforced concrete structure 2.b masonry/wooden roof2.e steel structure 2.c masonry/concrete roof 3. Damage 3.acategory 0 – no damage3.dcategory 3 – severe damage, can be repaired 3.bcategory 1 – minor damage3.ecategory 4 – destroyed 3.ccategory 2 – partial damage, can be repaired 4. Plan 4.asquare 4.cL-shaped 4.b rectangular 4.dcomplex 5. Soil 5.asoft5.c rock 5.b hard 5.d sloping

12 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Coordination Coordination needs to be achieved between stakeholders in order to: 1.Maximize capacity for assessment 2.Ensure all geographic areas are covered 3.Ensure assessment is consistent and response equitable 4.Reinforce the relations between the stakeholders It is rarely possible or valuable to enforce coordination. Therefore, proactive steps must be taken to identify how to make coordination valuable for each stakeholder.

13 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 The key learning objectives of this session are to form an understanding of: 1.Phases of assessment 2.Differences in building damage Session objectives

14 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Damage levels Damage levels can depend upon a number of factors: 1.hazards 2.intensity 3.location 4.vulnerabilities 5.buildings 6.zones

15 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Different damage from different hazards Each different hazard has its own different patterns: Earthquakes may have 3 different directions of motion: vertical motion horizontal motion vertical and horizontal motion simultaneously Floods may be: fast-onset slow-onset

16 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Disasters have different intensities, measured with scales, such as: earthquakes: (the Richter scale, 1-10, is now almost obsolete) Modified Mercalli intensity scale, 1-12, quantifies effects on the Earth's surface, humans, objects of nature, and structures, eg Intensity 11, Very Disastrous: few, if any masonry structures remain standing; bridges destroyed; rails bent greatly tornadoes: Fujita scale or Fujita-Pearson scale, 0-5 (6 levels) is based on damage to structures and vegetation, eg: Intensity 4, Devastating Damage: 333–418 km/h; well- constructed houses levelled; structures with weak foundations blown away some distance; cars thrown and large missiles generated. The Enhanced Fujita Scale, which has been introduced in the USA, adds new construction methods hurricanes: Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale, 1-5, is used for most Western Hemisphere tropical cyclones that exceed the intensities of tropical depressions and tropical storms, eg Intensity 4: 210–249 km/h winds; 4.0–5.5 metres storm surge Different damage from different intensity

17 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 The physical location of the disaster determines the impact upon settlement: flooding on a low-lying costal settlement earthquakes under a settlement on an alluvial plain cyclones entering a bay on a coast Different damage from different locations

18 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Different damage from vulnerability The population will be affected differently depending on their social and economic status. The more vulnerable groups are: populations living in high-risk locations populations living in poor-quality buildings These vulnerable groups are most likely to be or become: displaced populations marginal groups low-income populations urban populations Higher-income groups may be at greater risk if they adopt new building technologies that do not incorporate traditional hazard resistant design.

19 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Different types of buildings will be damaged differently by the same disaster: poorly-built apartments blocks may be more vulnerable to earthquakes than houses with traditional seismically resistant design schools may be less damaged than housing if they are built to higher-standards by government contractors following enforced building codes older building may be damaged differently from newer building due to different construction, materials and techniques Different damage from different buildings

20 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Within a disaster affected area, there will be different levels of damage which may be categorised into different zones, with an epicentre where the damage is greatest: the zones of damage will describe the vulnerability of the location and the vulnerability of the buildings zones may be highly-localised, for example in a flood where one street is damaged while the next street is not, because it is on high-ground zones of damage approximate to a hazard map, which may be used for future disaster risk reduction and preparedness Different damage from different zones

21 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Zones of housing damage Example of zones of housing damage, and movements between zones, following an earthquake Housing located in different zones will be damaged differently. Diagram: Transitional settlement and reconstruction after natural disaster (United Nations, 2008)

22 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 The key learning objectives of this session are to form an understanding of: 1.Phases of assessment 2.Differences in building damage Summary

23 IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 Discussion Identify one disaster and list the differences in building damage: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Discussion in pairs


Download ppt "IFRC Shelter Technical Training Yverdon-Les-Bains, Switzerland | 3 rd – 7 th March 2008 This session will look at how to quantify the impacts of different."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google