Full-Scale Validation of the Wind-Induced Response of Tall Buildings: Updated Findings from the Chicago Monitoring Project

2005 
While high-rise construction serves as one of the most challenging projects undertaken by society each year, tall buildings are one of the few constructed facilities whose design relies solely upon analytical and scaled models, which, though based upon fundamental mechanics and years of research and experience, have yet to be systematically validated in full-scale. In response to this deficiency, a full-scale monitoring project was initiated through the combined efforts of members of academe (University of Notre Dame), practicing design firms (Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP, Chicago) and commercial testing laboratories (Boundary Layer Wind Tunnel Laboratory, University of Western Ontario, Canada). The objective of this program is to monitor the full-scale response of some representative tall building structures and compare their actual performance to the predictions from wind tunnel testing and finite element computer models used in their design. As such, this program offers the opportunity to refine the design state-of-the-art based on any discrepancies revealed. As part of this full-scale evaluation, in-situ periods and damping ratios over a range of response amplitudes are being ascertained, which will prove vital for expanding the existing databases of full-scale dynamic properties. This paper presents a brief overview of the program.
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