Editorial: Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering: Géotechnique May 2015
Editorial: Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering: Géotechnique May 2015
Editorial: Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering: Géotechnique May 2015
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Damage to buildings and infrastructure due to geotechnical failures has been observed in all the
major earthquakes of the last half century, causing many thousands of deaths and many billions of
dollars of economic damage. Since the 1964 Niigata earthquake, this has resulted in a substantial
research effort to understand soil behaviour under cyclic loading, to predict the onset of damaging
phenomena such as soil liquefaction and to design foundations and geotechnical systems to survive
earthquake loading.
While this research effort has continued for the last fifty years, great advances have recently been
made using state of the art laboratory testing, dynamic centrifuge modelling and high quality field
investigations of system performance during earthquakes such as those in Christchurch, New
Zealand in 2010 and 2011 and the Tohoku earthquake in Japan in 2011. The ability of infrastructure
to continue to perform post-earthquake is of particular importance in allowing disaster mitigation
efforts to rapidly relieve suffering in the affected areas. It was also shown to play a major role in
resisting multi-hazards during the Tohoku earthquake, after which coastal defences already
damaged by earthquake shaking were required to resist Tsunami loading.
The response to this symposium in print was substantial with abstracts being submitted by authors
throughout the world. Following the standard review process of Geotechnique, ten papers have
been accepted for publication in this issue of the journal, with several further papers missing the
deadline to be ready for publication according to the planned schedule. These remaining papers
have been moved to the regular publication process of the journal and will appear in future issues.
The papers selected for this symposium cover a wide range of topics, from liquefaction prediction
based on site investigation to the interaction between buildings owing to coupling through the soil
between them. Despite the wide range of subjects, these papers all share the similarity of advancing
the current State of the Art in Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering research.
This issue was accompanied by a full-day symposium held on 15th June 2015 at the Institution of Civil
Engineers (ICE) in London. The symposium included two sessions on field behaviour of soils during
earthquakes and model testing of geotechnical systems during earthquakes. The ten papers were all
presented by their authors on the day, enabling a wide-ranging discussion to take place around
current issues in Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering. The symposium provided an excellent
opportunity to discuss the current state of the art in Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering and
future opportunities in both research and practice.
This volume also contains three papers published in Geotechnique in 2014 on Geotechnical
Earthquake Engineering. These papers, together with those presented during the SiP are
representative of the high quality work on this subject produced by researchers from around the
world and published in Geotechnique.
It was my great pleasure to act as chairman of the Geotechnique advisory panel subcommittee and
to have been guest editor of this issue of Geotechnique. I wish to thank the other members of the
subcommittee who have assisted me over the last 18 months for their enormous amount of effort in
making this issue and event occur. I would also like to thank all those who have reviewed papers for
their thorough and timely reviews. Finally I would like to thank Craig Schaper, Journals Editor at ICE
Publishing for his great efforts in efficiently organising this issue as well as for his ongoing efforts in
making Geotechnique a success.
Stuart Haigh
Cambridge University