Abstract

Rapid growth and the urban development of Chinese megacity in recent decades have led to land utilization challenges and the need for over-track buildings above metro depots that are part of the subway systems in these cities. Frequent subway operations into and out of the depots, which generate excessive vibration that transmits into the over-track buildings, can have adverse effects on the buildings’ occupants in terms of feelable vibration and noise. An efficient modeling procedure is presented for estimating vibration levels within the buildings before construction to determine whether vibration mitigation is required. Models were developed and validated based on vibration measurements in low-rise and high-rise buildings over a metro depot in Shenzhen, China. Impedance models were developed that characterize vibration transmission through the primary support columns or load-bearing walls into the building floors. Inputs to the model are vibration levels at the buildings’ foundation where the model estimates the transmission through individual support structures to the upper floors. Vibration estimates at different elevations within the building were compared with the measured levels during train pass-bys under the buildings with good agreement. Based on axial wave transmission impedances for column or load-bearing wall segments and simple impedance expressions for building floors, the closed-form analytical impedance model is an efficient and cost-effective tool for estimating floor vibration before construction.

Full Text
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