Abstract

The environmental impact on humans in buildings is caused by ground-borne vibration from rail transit systems, road traffic, construction sites, and industrial plants. To estimate the effect of vibration on humans, it is necessary to measure the tri-axial vibrations in the vertical and horizontal directions in buildings specified in ISO 2631-2:2003 or “Vibration Measurement Manual for Buildings” publicized by the Technical Subcommittees on Environmental Vibration Evaluation of The Institute of Noise Control Engineering of Japan. In this measurement example of building vibrations, vibration measurement was carried out for eight hours in a three-story, wooden detached house adjacent to a construction site. The residents perceived discomfort or annoyance from the vibration caused by the demolition work at the construction site. Five vibration measurement devices recorded simultaneously the vibration accelerations on the floor of each story, the concrete substructure and the asphalt pavement surface near the substructure. The 1/3 octave band vibration accelerations of each floor were estimated by the vibration perception threshold range of the vibration measurement manual. The vibration amplifications caused by building structural resonance was evaluated as ratios and level differences in the vibration accelerations measured at the ground near the substructure and floors in the houses.

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