Abstract
Geomatic approaches were used to investigate a landslide in the Emilian Apennines in northern Italy which occurred during excavation works for high-speed railway tunnels between 2002 and 2007. The landslide damaged three buildings located on the upper part of a hillside. At the site of interest, the high-speed railway system included three contiguous tunnels—the main tunnel and two connecting tunnels, “odd” and “even”—all crossing the “Chaotic Complex” formation. The archival multi-temporal digital photogrammetry technique was employed for photogrammetric surveys performed in 1998, 2004 and 2007, at a mean scale of about 1:8000. For all the surveys, stereo pairs of the area were available, and the black and white photo-frames were scanned using a Wehrli Raster Master RM2 photogrammetric scanner (12-μm resolution). Digital images were obtained, with a ground resolution in the range of 9–10 cm. The reference coordinates of the Ground Control Points (GCPs), as required for the external orientation of the images, were measured in 2009 in a stable area using GPS methodology. Orientation of the images was carried out with SOCET SET software, obtaining orientation residuals in the order of a few centimetres. An approach based on the multi-temporal sets of photographs was used, comparing the coordinates and amplitudes of the motion vectors. In doing so, 3D vectorial representations were obtained, providing displacements of about 14 cm in the initial period (1998–2004) and of about 25 cm in the latter period (2004–2007). From a chronological point of view, this data corresponded with both the beginning of the damage and the progression of the excavation of the tunnels, thus confirming the vulnerability of the Chaotic Complex to stress changes during the works.
Highlights
This paper analyses some geomatic approaches used to investigate the causes of damage to three buildings located on the upper part of a hillside in the Emilian Apennines in northern Italy, during excavation works, which were carried out between 2002 and 2007
It was thought helpful to reconstruct the field of displacements which occurred in the study area. This difficulty was overcome by carrying out a multi-temporal digital photogrammetry investigation, through which the ground displacements could be compared, even those which occurred before the start of the high-precision altimetry monitoring (January 2007)
The processed aerial images, acquired in Digital aerial photogrammetry was used to evaluate the displacements of three buildings damaged by the high-speed railway excavation in the Pianoro territory (Bologna, northern Italy)
Summary
This paper analyses some geomatic approaches used to investigate the causes of damage to three buildings located on the upper part of a hillside in the Emilian Apennines in northern Italy, during excavation works, which were carried out between 2002 and 2007. The hilly area under study belongs to the municipality of Pianoro (Bologna, Italy) and the works were being carried out for a high-speed railway, known in Italy as Treno Alta Velocità (TAV) (or “high-speed train”). Three tunnels needed to be excavated in this area: a main tunnel with a diameter of about 14 m and two secondary connecting tunnels, “odd” and “even”. The connecting tunnels have a diameter of about 11 m and run almost parallel to the main tunnel. The main tunnel was excavated between February 2002 and October 2003, while the two connecting tunnels, odd and even, were excavated simultaneously, between June 2006 and March 2007. The connecting tunnels were excavated both from the north and south; the meeting of the two fronts
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