Abstract

AbstractAddressing land subsidence requires the identification of root causes, modeling its initiation failure modes, and managing this risk in a cost-effective manner. This paper presents a methodology for quantifying and managing the risk of land subsidence resulting from underground cavities and illustrates this methodology using a case study of a site that was exposed to such a phenomenon in Kuwait. The methodology produces the hazard and risk profiles by computing the probability of sinkhole formation over a selected geographic area based on field data and examining spatial characteristics of the cavities. Developing the methodology required reviewing project plans and relevant reports, defining decision processes relating to land subsidence resulting from underground cavities, examining the spatial characteristics of cavities, performing reliability analysis for a selected failure mode, and performing regression analysis for predicting grout volume needed to fill in cavities. Considering for illustr...

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